Trade Deficit, Budget Talks Threaten Recession
The $500 billion annual trade deficit is a major drag on domestic demand, and will likely worsen in the months ahead. Together with a deal to slash the federal budget deficit that raises taxes and cuts government spending by a combined $250 billion, the trade gap could thrust the economy into recession again.
The U.S. economy suffers from too little demand.
Consumers are spending, and the annual federal deficit has increased from $161 billion before the financial crisis to more than $1 trillion, injecting enormous additional demand into the system. However, too many of those dollars go abroad for Middle East oil and Chinese goods that do not return to buy U.S. exports.
Businesses, pessimistic about future domestic spending net of imports and facing rising employee benefit costs mandated by Obamacare and burdensome new regulations, are reluctant to hire in the U.S. These have frustrated the virtuous cycle of temporary tax cuts and additional government spending, new hiring and additional household spending that Keynesian stimulus was supposed to beget.
Now the nation faces a recession if budget negotiators substantially cut the federal deficit.
Imported oil and subsidized imports from China account for the entire trade gap. President Obama has talked repeatedly about developing the full range of energy resources, but maintained counterproductive limits on oil production in the Gulf, off the Pacific and Atlantic Coasts and Alaska.
Development of new onshore reserves in the Lower 48 have not delivered enough new oil to cut imports in half, as is possible with a full push on U.S. reserves, and the potential impact of electric cars and wind, solar and other alternatives is limited for at least the next decade.
To keep Chinese products artificially inexpensive on U.S. store shelves, Beijing undervalues the yuan through intervention in currency markets. It pirates U.S. technology, subsidizes exports and imposes high tariffs on imports.
Beijing offers token gestures, knowing President Obama will not take the strong actions, advocated by economists across the ideological and political spectrum, to force China to abandon its mercantilist policies. It successfully cultivates political support for the American policy of appeasement among large U.S. multinationals and banks doing business and profiting in the Middle Kingdom.