One step at a time.
- All money changing hands is a redistribution of wealth.
- This is referred to as an economy.
- Of the many definitions of socialism, one of the earliest is the idea of the state ownership of capital (controlling investment and production).
- Most other definitions of socialism deal with public spending priorities, without state ownership, and might best be referred to as... public spending in line with voter policy choices. Capitalism remains intact.
- State capitalism refers to when the state acts in close collusion with private interests controlling capital, the three best examples today being Egypt, Russia and China. Similar to socialism in that the control of political and economic power is concentrated in few hands.
- Foreign trade of goods and services is part of the economy and forms part of normal transfers.
- Trade imbalances, when persistent and large, do amount to effective transfers of national wealth. However, as Adam Smith and others pointed out, normally this would be corrected by various "invisible hands", either through currency reevaluation or policies aimed at various price or quantity adjustments.
- Such corrections have been anathema to GOP policy until Trump, the demagogue, fanboy of state capitalism. They run counter to GOP donor interest.
- The large trade deficit with China is a wealth transfer, and is by now quite obviously a huge problem, given that China is a bad faith player practicing state capitalism and using heinous trade policies (IP theft).
- IP is the main driver of long term economic growth. The mass injection the US received post-WWII represents one of the largest transfers of assets that generate wealth ever. It gave the US both the space program and the transistor.
- IP theft is therefore theft not only of tools of trade today, but of the compound growth effects of that IP.
That is what should concern you most. Next comes onshoring production. My favorite would be the concerted adoption by the West of the
exact same IP transfer requirement China has been using in order for any Chinese enterprise to sell major capital goods in the West, as well as the requirement for local production if market share is over a certain percentage, and finally including the measures the Japanese perfected to reject goods based on minor defects, holding them in customs during lengthy, agonizing "inspections". This should of course also involve levying a surcharge income tax on American companies that produce 100% abroad, like Apple.
Simple trade restrictions a la
GOP Panic Time are the poor man's Fox talking point for losers. If you want to take on the real issue, you take on IP theft, labor policy, and currency manipulation, along with local tax policy on companies operating entirely offshore.
Sure, lots of issues with the WTO. Which means time for a rethink across the board. Financing a sworn enemy of democracy and the rule of law with our every shopping trip is madness.