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by defrost
433 days ago
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> Long-term trade deficits are intrinsically bad. > The intrinsically bad part is the trade imbalance, The basis of your comment appears to be recieved wisdom from an uncredited source, what many regard as an opinion of dubious standing. eg: Back on the goods side, when the US economy is robust and people have disposable income, imports naturally increase. Ultimately, while trade deficits indicate economic dynamics, they are not inherently negative nor do they signify economic weakness.
Rather, they often reflect a nation’s economic structure and consumer preference for diverse global products. After all, Australia has run trade deficits for decades, including with the US, and is one of the wealthiest countries in the world.
from: https://theconversation.com/no-thats-not-what-a-trade-defici...and numerous other professional opinions from economics and trade. |
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Trump is a textbook Mercantilist (positive trade balance inherently good [2]). Rather than magazine articles, see the Palgrave (the definitive encyclopedic reference for Econ) entry [1] and the Wikipedia page [2] for the arguments and history.
I always find reading the highest quality material leads to the highest quality thinking—there’s certainly a reason why modern LLM training mixtures might weight wikipedia tokens 5x and webtext 0.5x. :>
[1]: https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1057/978-1-3...
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercantilism