Posted by Eric Posner:
The Auto Bailout Bill and the New Protectionism?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_12_07-2008_12_13.shtml#1229004028


   Economists believe that the Smoot-Hawley tariff law of 1930
   exacerbated the Great Depression. It provoked retaliation by other
   countries and reduction of international trade at precisely the wrong
   time�during an economic contraction when demand should have been
   stoked rather than suppressed. Today, no one proposes an increase in
   tariffs, though some [1]commentators have mischievously suggested that
   raising tariffs could be more effective than a fiscal stimulus
   (provided, I assume, that retaliation does not occur) for restarting
   the economy. So we have learned from our mistakes, right?

   Not if the auto bailout bill is an indication. The bill applies only
   to �each automobile manufacturer that submitted a plan to the Congress
   on December 2, 2008��which just happen to turn out to be GM, Ford, and
   Chrysler, not Toyota, Honda, or Nissan. The bill is a massive subsidy
   to American automakers alone; it will thus give them a competitive
   advantage vis-� -vis foreign carmakers (which, as we know, are more
   efficient manufacturers than the dinosaurs in Detroit). Other
   countries are already engaging in similar subsidy schemes, which will
   put American firms at a disadvantage in their markets. These
   beggar-thy-neighbor policies have effects similar to those of a tariff
   war�depending on the degree and pattern of subsidy, driving lower-cost
   manufacturers out of business and raising costs (in the form of
   regular taxes rather than tariff-inflated prices) for everyone, and
   hence suppressing demand.

   The new wave of protectionism actually began a few months ago, when it
   was discovered that saving the credit market meant offering assistance
   to foreign banks as well as domestic banks. Many members of Congress
   balked and sought to limit financial assistance to American banks;
   otherwise, American taxpayers would end up putting money in the pocket
   of feckless foreign creditors rather than feckless American creditors.
   Differences were papered over and it remains to be seen whether
   Treasury doles out goodies on a discriminatory basis. ([2]Hmm.) No
   doubt foreign governments are watching closely.

   One can imagine a fiscal stimulus that was nondiscriminatory. The
   government would offer cheap loans to foreign automakers as well as
   domestic automakers, for example. The stimulus would benefit the
   Japanese and German economies as well as the American economy, but it
   would not give any advantage to American automakers unless their
   problem is really one of liquidity rather than economic
   fundamentals�which seems most doubtful�so the stimulus might buy a
   little time but eventually the American automakers would go out of
   business. In theory, the Japanese and German governments would also
   make available their stimulus packages to American companies. Don�t
   hold your breath. Put aside the outcry�already heard during the bank
   debate�against American taxpayers giving money to foreigners. Without
   reciprocal stimulus packages, giving aid to foreign companies is not a
   very effective way to help Americans (though it could raise demand for
   American products). Smoot and Hawley, maybe we were a little hard on
   you. In bad times, economic nationalism is hard to control.

   Despite their perverse effects, international trade law does not ban
   domestic subsidies. At one time, the United States [3]sought to change
   this rule. How times have changed.

References

   1. 
http://rodrik.typepad.com/dani_rodriks_weblog/2008/12/some-unpleasant-keynesian-arithmetic.html
   2. http://bailout.uslaw.com/?page_id=353
   3. http://worldtradelaw.typepad.com/ielpblog/2007/06/prohibiting_mor.html

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