Yes. I did say those things. If you want to claim what I've said so far is counter to them, you're going to need to elaborate quite a bit more.
lol pass. it's way funnier watching you completely change your argument mid-discussion.
Diversifying the supply chain keeps us from relying on an adversary.
china is our
ally.
but sure, partially. it somewhat mitigates our reliance, but it does not alleviate it (we're always gonna buy assloads of steel from china). but it certainly doesn't "keep our miners and manufacturers from going bankrupt competing with subsidized Chinese firms" or whatever.
the paper doesn't recommend that the US lift its tariffs. Why is that?
for one thing, it absolutely does. they recommend increasing tariffs only on materials deemed critical to the economy while negotiating the others away.
for another thing, their analysis does not calculate or estimate the
net effect of the tariffs. they quantify the overall cost to the us economy (e.g. it's a tax on poor people), and they assert some of the benefits (e.g. decreased trade deficit). but since they don't compare the two, i can't tell you why they recommend their proposals other than "they believe the benefits outweigh the costs."
for another another thing, none of this matters since this isn't trump's tariff plan. like, you can tell me all day long that we have to stop relying on chinese steel since china is an adversary. okay, cool. what's that got to do with 25% tariffs on literally all products from canada and mexico? or raising all tariffs on all chinese goods by 10%? sorry, but that's an absolutely horrifically fucking stupid economic policy, and you should feel super silly for defending it.
In short, the increases in U.S. tariffs in 2018 resulted in reductions in U.S. manufacturing exports, output, and employment; accelerated producer and consumer price inflation; and diminished household welfare, especially for lower-income households.i think that's bad. i think vastly expanding the scope of things that are bad is even more bad.