Why Manufacturing May Never Come back |
送交者: 2025年04月08日16:40:42 于 [世界游戏论坛] 发送悄悄话 |
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Title: Trump's Tariff Trap: Why Manufacturing May Never Come Back By: me 1. Introduction: The Tariff Dream Donald Trump's trade war with China is not just about punishing a geopolitical rival. At its core, it is an attempt to reverse decades of deindustrialization and bring factories back to the United States. Through massive tariffs on Chinese imports, Trump hopes to make offshore manufacturing less profitable and thus force American companies to return production to U.S. soil. But this strategy, while emotionally appealing to many voters, is riddled with contradictions and practical obstacles. 2. The Immediate Economic Blowback Tariffs don't just hurt China—they also hurt the U.S. economy. Chinese goods form the backbone of many supply chains in the U.S., especially in retail, logistics, and low-end consumer goods. If Chinese products suddenly become more expensive or unavailable:
This chain reaction hits the very heart of America's service-based economy, leading to lower consumption and slower GDP growth. While the administration might hope that this pain triggers an industrial renaissance, the reality is far more complex. 3. Manufacturing Doesn’t Come Home Automatically Trump's strategy assumes that if producing in China becomes expensive, companies will bring factories back to the U.S. But capital doesn't flow by presidential decree. It flows where profit margins are highest. In reality, most companies will choose to relocate to other low-cost countries—Vietnam, India, Mexico, Indonesia—rather than the U.S., where labor is expensive, regulation is tighter, and industrial infrastructure has eroded. Even with subsidies or tax breaks, the cost structure of American manufacturing remains uncompetitive. Decades of offshoring have also hollowed out the skilled labor force and supply chains necessary to support rapid reindustrialization. 4. The Political Time Bomb Let’s assume some companies are willing to try reshoring, even with higher costs. There's still a fundamental question: What happens after Trump?
In a political system defined by 4-year cycles and deep partisan division, the long-term certainty required for capital-intensive investments is simply not there. CEOs won’t invest hundreds of millions in new factories if policy may change with the next election. This political risk freezes decision-making and undermines the whole point of the tariff strategy. 5. The Marxist Lens: Contradictions of Capitalism From a Marxist perspective, the failure of Trump's strategy is not surprising. Under capitalism, capital seeks the highest return. Without fundamental changes to the internal structure of U.S. capitalism—such as state planning, public investment in infrastructure, education, and labor reform—tariffs alone cannot reverse the flow of capital. Manufacturing will not return unless the entire system is rebuilt to support it. Tariffs may temporarily disrupt global supply chains, but they will not rewire the logic of capital accumulation. In this context, Trump’s plan is more about economic nationalism as political theater than a feasible path to reindustrialization. 6. Conclusion: The Trap Is Set Trump’s tariff war is a trap: it damages the existing economic structure without building a new one. It harms both the U.S. and China, but fails to deliver on its promise of domestic revival. Without a long-term strategy, deep structural reform, and political continuity, manufacturing won’t return. The result may be inflation, lost jobs, slower growth—and no new factories. |
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