International Trade and the U.S.

Explaining the impact of International Trade. Does International Trade Hurt the United States?

In my opinion, International Trade does not hurt the United States. It does expand our economic impact. As the article points out when U.S. exports to the rest of the world are declining, U.S. imports of foreign goods tend to decline as well.

The Issue:

The Facts:

What this Means:

While some countries may engage at times in protectionist measures or provide subsidies to specific industries that result in advantages to some of their domestic industries, bilateral trade deficits are not of themselves evidence that this is the case. In fact, they provide an increasingly unreliable picture in the face of globally integrated production. Workers whose companies face greater international competition can be hurt by trade. There are strong arguments for appropriate safety net policies for them, as there are for those hurt by economic dislocations due to technological change or other disruptive factors. The fact that trade has become a bigger share of the economy, both for the United States and for the world as a whole, means disruptions to trade and global supply chains can have a consequential economic impact. For the economy as a whole, both trade deficits and overall growth arise from other, underlying causes and there is no systematic link between bigger trade deficits and slower economic growth.