Search

Search results

  1. Economists almost unanimous—rising trade barriers not good

    Trade with China may actually have increased manufacturing employment in the United States. ...

  2. The United States calls the kettle black

    Canadians owe Donald Trump a debt of gratitude for repeatedly referring to our average 270 per cent tariffs on dairy products coming into—or trying to come into—this country. For many Canadians, that’s probably the first they’ve heard of ...

  3. Withstand the trade war by trading more

    Canada and the United States are in a trade war. The ongoing drama of NAFTA negotiations, and the possibility that the current trade arrangements, may not continue raises an important question. What is the Trudeau government’s Plan B? ...

  4. Canada, Trump and tariffs—a counterproductive and self-defeating quarrel

    President Trump’s recent actions have drawn widespread media attention to tariffs. Economic science provides an effective means of discerning the implications amid the hyperbole and rhetoric. Earlier this year, the Trump administration ...

  5. The end of Trump-whispering

    I wrote in January about how economists, apart from warning about the consequences, don’t have an awful lot to say about how best to fight a trade war. Adam Smith himself wrote that such wars were a situation in which policy be left to ...

  6. Under threat—the lucrative export of U.S. dollar notes and U.S. Treasury securities

    President Donald Trump’s policies to balance trade and increase employment will likely fail because of an iron law of international economics: If a country spends more on goods and services than it produces, the difference must be ...