I agree and I’d hate to have to deal with him face to face or country to country. However, I think he expects this kind of retaliation and is smug about it. I think he expects to lose some us business and expects the other side to vilify him. The republicans vilified Biden and blame him - the see saw of politics like Newberg said is like a WWF match; they make a lot of drama and nothing real ever gets done.Article is an example of the derivative effects of acting like an a-hole to friends with tariffs. It is important to keep in mind that over 1/4 of th exports in trade balance is made up of services and over 50% of the Tech sectors revenue is from outside US.
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Trump’s Aggression Sours Europe on US Cloud Giants
Companies in the EU are starting to look for ways to ditch Amazon, Google, and Microsoft cloud services amid fears of rising security risks from the US. But cutting ties won’t be easy.www.wired.com
For the sake of perspective, he has compelled the EU to stop discounting payments to NATO based on an agreed percentage of their GDP and to give more support to Ukraine in their fight against a common enemy.
The EU is giving him the bird and complying to pay their agreed on/fair share. I don’t think he minds the reaction; in fact, I think he is smug about it since their anger and compliance is sufficient confirmation. Is this better than losing a few businesses to Europe? Time will tell but that article is certainly unsettling.
His stated goal to balance trade is easier to toss around when you have a ‘trade deficit’. Is simple and easy to believe as it is to disbelieve.
To your earlier point, context matters and I agree that one must be careful because we do have the highest wages. None of us want the China jobs that pay peanuts and yes we built it this way on purpose. Since technology has advanced well beyond that phase, I think I can see the reason he wants to at least tweak the deficit.
In my state and just a handful of others, there’s been a growing interest in trade school models that have a mix of competitive academics with real-world, on-the-job-training of a specialized vocation. Such as mechatronics, welding, aviation mechanics, cybersecurity, construction management, … This emerging new model is not common; only about 30 schools like it exist in our country.
I’m aware of it since one like it was recently built in our county. It’s a public trade school built with zero state funding, county tax dollars and 50% of funds from private investors counting on them to provide their labor force.
New high school grads from trade schools earn a starting average pay of $67,000 and are college ready if it interests them. This relatively recent trend started before Trump, but I suspect his supporters want him to mess with the trade balance to shift more advanced manufacturing opportunities on US soil.
I did a quick search on this: With an average ‘starting salary/per tuition+board’ dollar of a:
1) trade-school HS grad: $67K/free,
it obliterates the average ROI of four year college grad:
$57K/$39,000 minimum (avg tuition +room/board per Experian)