Maxwell School News and Commentary
Filtered by: Trade
Lovely featured in Bloomberg article on impact of US tariffs on China
"The proposed tariffs will hit bilateral trade in fast-growing, knowledge-based sectors the hardest," say Mary Lovely, professor of economics, and Yang Liang, a Ph.D. candidate in economics. "Rather than hitting the administration’s intended target—Chinese firms that may have unfairly obtained American technology—the proposed tariffs would actually inflict damage on U.S. high-technology sectors."
See related: China, Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Lovely weighs in on steel tariff exemptions in Agence France Presse
Mary Lovely, professor of economics, warns that using national security as a justification for trade measures opens the door for other countries to do the same. "This is a really slippery slope in a bazillion ways," she says. "This could be a blank check for using these kinds of tools."
See related: Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Lovely speaks with AP, Minnesota Public Radio about products targeted by US-China tariffs
Mary Lovely, professor of economics, says it’s impossible to protect American consumers and put maximum pressure on China at the same time.
See related: China, Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Lovely speaks with China Central TV about new US tariffs
“This is a warning. It means that when China utilizes American technology and innovation to make achievements, the U.S. will not sit aside and simply let it happen,” says Mary Lovely, professor of economics.
See related: China, Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Lovely speaks with Nexstar about new tariffs on Chinese imports
"A trade war is not inevitable," says Mary Lovely, professor of economics. "But the time is getting very late for us to avoid it."
See related: China, Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Lovely discusses fairness of Chinese automobile tariffs in CNN Money
Mary Lovely, professor of economics, says the reason why the United States and China have such drastically different tariff rates for imported cars is because of a pre-existing deal between the countries to keep car tariffs high while slashing import taxes on other goods, such as soybeans.
See related: China, Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Mitra weighs in on India's tariff hikes in Wall Street Journal
Instead of raising tariffs India should have emulated China by reforming labor laws and maintaining a low-tariff regime on intermediate goods to attract export-oriented global manufacturing firms, according to Devashish Mitra, Gerald B. and Daphna Cramer Professor of Global Affairs.
See related: Government, India, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade
Lovely weighs in on tariffs on imported goods in Chicago Tribune
According to Professor Mary Lovely, a drawback to the hefty tariffs President Trump imposed on imported washing machines and solar panels is that "there will be less innovation in the long term."
See related: Federal, International Affairs, Tariffs, Trade, United States
Wilcoxen chapter on the G-Cubed model featured in Handbook
See related: Trade