| "Good. The income of laborers and low-wage workers has been artificially suppressed due to uncontrolled immigration working at rates lower than minimum wage. My hope is that these actions will increase the wages of the lower class, which will increase the velocity of the dollar in America and get our economy going again." Or, you know, we'll just import whatever it is for 2 cents more instead of paying people to do it.
Unless you start to make it artificially expensive to do that through tariffs.
In which case, you are essentially trying to prop up the entire economy on a house of cards. Which is what got us into a mess in the first place. You can't build a sustainable economy on pretending things aren't actually cheap and that people aren't willing to get paid next to nothing to do them. It's the same thinking that, for example has us building m1 abrams tanks that we toss in the desert, never to be used again, because "these people need jobs", despite the military not actually wanting to build them anymore and desperately trying to get congress to let them cancel it. In the best case, this kind of silliness lasts until things get automated.
In most cases, this kind of silliness lasts a lot shorter time period than that because your economy is not competitive with others who aren't pretending (IE China, et al). So unless step 2 of this master plan is "somehow completely isolate ourselves from the rest of the world while making tons of money, ..." |
What about the negative externalities that come when a country no longer has an industry that many others rely on? When it comes to things like quality and having a stable supply chain, those kinds of things can be glossed over when "it's always 2c cheaper from china".
Steel is a good example, the main reason why china is still banned from trading steel on the open market even though it's so much cheaper is their lack of QA and also their government's lack of market reforms which would prevent china from effectively pumping and dumping on the world market.
Or what about food? Sure you can just import 100% of your food and let all the farmers in your country go out of business to the subsidised farmers from other countries because it makes economic sense, but anyone could see the potential dangers that could occur in the long term that would make such a plan more trouble than it would be worth.