BRITAIN DOESN’T NEED DONALD TRUMP’S MERCANTILISM
The late Sir George Martin, “the man who made The Beatles,” created substantial British exports.
Had the import of his music to America been banned to save the jobs of US musicians, Britain would have missed out on some revenue but the American consumer would have been the biggest loser, missing out on the music. Trade benefits the importing country: that’s why it happens.
Frankly, we might as well be living in the 17th century, so antiquated are our current debates over trade, both here over Brexit and in America over the presidential nominations. Many current assumptions about trade, such as Mr. Trump’s, were debunked more than two hundred years ago and then tested to destruction in the mid-19th century.
In the 17th and 18th centuries European governments were in thrall to “mercantilism”. They sought to restrain imports with tariffs and bans, while encouraging exports with monopolies and gunboats.
Along came Adam Smith and made a different argument, that mercantilism punished consumers and the poor, while rewarding protected producers and the rich; that imports were a good thing because they raised people’s standard of living by giving them what they wanted at lower prices. It’s a shame Donald Trump never read Adam Smith.

What do you see here? A group of Moslem “refugees” walking in a snowstorm headed for the German Welfare State?

