Judging Freedom - Prof. Jeffery Sachs: The Disaster of Tariffs
Episode Date: April 4, 2025Prof. Jeffery Sachs: The Disaster of TariffsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
. Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Thursday, April
3rd, 2025. Professor Jeffrey Sachs joins us now. Professor Sachs, thank you very much.
Thank you for double duty this week.
But you and I communicated with each other yesterday
in a fit of anger and fury
over the president's misunderstanding of economics 101.
And we're going to talk,
we're not gonna talk about Gaza
and we're not gonna talk about Ukraine.
We're gonna talk about your field
as a professor of economics, which you were at Harvard and are at Columbia.
The president's statement, his executive order, which you and I read as long and abstruse
and boring and nonsensical as it is, hinges on the fact that in his view we are facing
an emergency because it is based on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977, signed
into law by President Jimmy Carter. That act defines an emergency. And from the definition of an emergency comes
the president's powers to impose a tariff. Now, President Trump originally said the emergency
was the introduction of fentanyl in the United States. And then his advisors told him, look,
it's coming from Mexico and there and the little tiny bit of it coming
From Canada, but you want to put two tariffs on
Everybody so you can't use fentanyl and so they can cop to the economic emergency
The definition of an economic emergency under the act then I'm gonna throw the ball to you professor sacks is
an unusual and extraordinary
threat to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States originating
in whole or substantial part outside the United States.
If you read the President's executive order, as you and I have done, it says that
this started in 1934.
So how can this be an unusual or extraordinary threat if it's been going on for 89 or 91
years?
I'll let you take it from there.
What kind of an emergency is this?
It is an emergency how utterly awful today was
in terms of economic policy.
Trump has created something,
you might call it an emergency, but it's basically a phenomenal
blunder. Now, why did he use the word emergency? Because that's the only way that he can do this
himself. A tariff is a tax. A tax is the responsibility of the U.S. Congress. Indeed, the proposal to introduce
or change a tax must originate in the House of Representatives. So Trump's use of the
phrase emergency is a gimmick. It's a gimmick that allows him single-handedly to wreck the international
trading system. Otherwise, what Trump has done today would have to be done under the U.S.
Constitution by a congressional act. The fact of the matter is Congress would not do such a thing,
The fact of the matter is Congress would not do such a thing, or it would take a little bit of time so it could be utterly ridiculed along the way and most likely stopped through
the ridicule.
As long as we have one person rule in the United States, which we have because the Congress is quiescent entirely.
It has seemingly given up all responsibility to our president.
As long as we have one person rule, we have the possibility of this kind of utterly profound
blunder on the substance. No, there was no emergency yesterday or today
that remotely justifies handing such extraordinary power to one person and in this case one person
who understands nothing about what he's doing. No justification whatsoever. Is there, I mean the other linchpin here as I see it and of course I'm a layperson when it comes to
the economy but not when it comes to the law, is there a downside to a trade deficit? I mean this
almost seems childish that this is the economic lynchpin.
The legal lynchpin is the definition of an emergency.
You've already dealt with that.
The economic lynchpin, correct me if you read this differently.
As I read it, is that we have a trade deficit.
It's caused by other countries ripping us off.
And now we're going to get them back. Is that a fair
reading of what he wrote or what he signed in his executive order yesterday? Well, that's exactly
the claim. The claim is, again, fatuous. It's a complete misunderstanding. A trade deficit means
you're buying more from abroad
than you are selling abroad.
It doesn't mean anybody is ripping you off.
It means you're spending more than you've earned.
And maybe there's a justification for doing that.
Maybe you're spending too much compared to your income.
So you have to look. But per se, a trade deficit has nothing
to do with actual trade policy of the other country.
Now, this is also quite interesting.
The idea that Trump claimed before yesterday
was that the US would impose reciprocal tariffs.
The idea was if another country puts on a 10% tariff, we would put on a 10% tariff.
If the country puts on a 20% tariff on us, we would put on a 20% tariff. In other words, our tariff level would reciprocate what the other
country is doing. What happened yesterday has nothing at all to do with what the other country is
doing in its tariff policy. In fact, the first words of so-called explanation, the methodology,
by the US Trade Representative's Office,
which purportedly made this calculation is,
oh, we don't know what the other country's doing.
That would take a long time.
We can't figure out what they're doing.
So we're just going to assume
that if we are running a trade deficit with another country, they must be
ripping us off. Not that we see that they are or that we measure that they are or that
their policy in fact is doing that. We're just going to say that if we're spending more
in another country than that country is buying from us. They are ripping us off.
Well it is Alice in Wonderland what was said. There's nothing reciprocal. There's nothing
about other countries. We spend more on goods abroad than other countries spend on ours.
Most importantly, because we run huge budget deficits, so our governments like a giant
credit card for the American people.
It borrows massively trillions of dollars.
And that means that it's putting out lots of purchasing power, more than it's
taking in. It's doing that by running up debt. And that purchasing power is used by American
businesses and households to spend. And the result is that they spend more than America
produces each year. What's the gap between how much we spend and how much we
produce? It is exactly equal to our trade deficit, not close exactly, because that's what the trade
deficit is measuring. So what he's ranting and raving about, and it is a rant, about the trade deficit is caused by the government over
which he presides. It is not caused by other countries ripping us off, or it is caused by,
just like in your household, you spend more money than you take in, you've got a deficit,
you've got a debt, you haven't done anything wrong, you haven't committed a crime, nobody's
ripping you off, it's your own decision. And more than that, it's exactly like you go
shopping on your credit card. You run up a debt and then you blame the merchant that sold you the
goods. They're ripping me off because I'm running a deficit with them. This is exactly what it is.
We buy from abroad and they're ripping us off.
How do you know they're ripping us off?
Because we're spending more than they are.
Honest to God, this is exactly what just happened.
Here's his press spokesperson.
This is the official government response
to your and my and others,
it's almost universal in your community of economists,
criticism of the president, cut number nine.
This is a national emergency.
We have a $1.2 trillion trade deficit.
We've had 90,000 factories closed across our heartland.
We've had 5 million manufacturing jobs
go overseas since 1997.
And President Trump is finally doing something about it
by implementing these reciprocal tariffs.
It's the golden rule for the golden age of America.
As for prices and what the American public can expect,
they can expect price stability.
They can expect to buy American.
It's a patriotic thing to do.
This is political claptrap, but I'll let you take it on.
Resolve to earn your degree
in the new year in the Bay with WGU.
With courses available online 24-7 and monthly
start dates, WGU offers maximum flexibility so you can focus on your future. Learn more at wgu.edu.
It looks like an AI fake, frankly. Is that really someone talking or is that stringing together a bunch of words that absolutely
mean nothing? So again, the charge, look what they're doing to us, the grievance, look how
terrible. What does she know about where jobs went? Why factories close or don't close? The fact of the matter is you go to a factory that is
producing and it has robotics producing in the factory. That's where jobs went. In millions of
jobs on the assembly line. Didn't go abroad. No one victimized us. No one tricked us. You go to an automobile plant, there are fewer workers
because there are robots on the assembly line.
Ah, but somebody's making the robots.
No, but it's not even that.
It's just the jobs, the jobs,
there are, the jobs are right there before your eyes.
The machines are doing them on the assembly line.
It's not that somebody else has stolen that work.
That is what automation is and what it absolutely did
in for millions of jobs in manufacturing.
So if I go to Amazon or Walmart to buy a toaster,
which today costs $25 because it's made in China,
and I'm poor or middle class, my family wants a toaster. What does this do to me?
It makes me spend more money.
It reduces my choices.
Well, look, for the entire country,
it's going to make Americans poorer.
It's actually gonna make the world poorer
because when there's international trade, both sides gain from trade. We buy things
that are relatively inexpensive of other countries to produce. They buy things that the United States
produces with a comparative advantage. It's called gains from trade. It's a concept I think Donald Trump doesn't understand that actually in a deal both sides
can gain and if you stop that kind of exchange both sides lose.
And what's interesting about today, not a surprise, but since Donald Trump single-handedly
is trying to blow up the international trade system. Stock markets went down everywhere.
It's not like the U.S. stock market said, oh, now we win. We're not getting ripped off. No. The United States shed trillions of dollars of market capitalization today. Oh, so you say, oh, it went abroad. They won. No. Trillions of
dollars were lost abroad too. Because both sides, the U.S. and the rest of the world,
lose when there isn't trade. That's something I think Mr. Trump doesn't get, the idea that you can have a benefit from exchange,
not a winner and a loser.
The Wall Street Journal, which basically is a supporter of the president and his ideas,
I've tangled with them many times on the constitutionality of what the president is
trying to do, nevertheless is leading the charge against the tariffs.
And they hired some people to put together a clip.
It's only about 90 seconds long, but it demonstrates how not a single car in the United States
of America, not a single one, is assembled entirely of parts produced in the United States of America, not a single one is assembled entirely of parts produced in
the United States of America.
And then it demonstrates how Joe Sixpack with a MAGA hat on is going to have to spend more
money to buy a car which he thinks is American and thinks was made here.
Giving credit to the Wall Street Journal and to Dow Jones
as they are entitled to because they produced this under the fair use doctrine. We're running it and
here it is. This chart shows where cars sold in the U.S. are coming from. All of these cars now
face that 25 percent auto tariff. But this 53 percent of U.S.-made cars is also affected by that tariff because of all of those
foreign parts. Some of the major components, this is for the Ford F-150. They have an alternator,
create current. It's from Mexico. We have half shafts. These deliver torque to the wheels from
the driveline. They're from Canada. We have tires, of course, five of them. These come from Korea.
Of course, you have to have wheels, in this case, a styled track of wheels.
These all come from Mexico.
Those tires from South Korea would face that auto tariff
and any reciprocal or universal tariff
placed on the country.
Those parts from Canada and Mexico,
well, that's where it gets more complicated.
Eventually, they would face that auto tariff,
any reciprocal or universal tariff,
and an additional Mexico-Canada
tariff.
But the White House said parts compliant with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement, or
USMCA, remain tariff-free until there is a process to apply tariffs to their non-U.S.
content.
And for some parts, like a transmission, there will be a lot of content to consider.
This is going to be disruptive on day one.
It's going to increase the cost of doing business.
The total amount depends on the vehicle.
A Cox Automotive estimate shows a car made in the US
would incur $3,000 in costs from the Canada-Mexico tariffs,
plus another $3,000 from the tariffs
on foreign-made auto parts.
Then research shows an added $400
for the steel and aluminum tariffs,
and more for any reciprocal or universal tariffs.
I thought we had a treaty with Mexico and Canada, a free trade treaty. They once called it NAFTA.
Trump didn't like the name of it, so they changed. It's like he doesn't like the names of a lot of
things. They changed the name, but it basically was a free trade agreement, was it not?
Well, the basic point here is that throughout the manufacturing
sector, it's not only automobiles.
You'd find it in every single sector.
US production is part of global supply chains.
Sometimes, often from Canada and Mexico under the USMCA, the
US-Mexico-Canada free trade arrangement, the one that Trump renamed, but also from many
other places in the world.
And that means that when tariffs are imposed, industries now have higher costs for their inputs. If our industries were actually
exporting their goods to world markets, they're getting squeezed by these tariffs. They're not
getting protected by these tariffs. Even if they are selling into the U.S. market to U.S. consumers,
their input prices are going up steeply.
The idea that these tariffs are a protection
for U.S. manufacturing is a very naive idea,
given the fact that our industry is part
of global supply chains.
And there was a quite careful study recently published of Trump's tariffs put in place in 2018 and 2019,
because this is the first time that Trump has put in tariffs. He did that in the first term also.
It turns out that higher tariffs in a given industry was predictive of lower employment of that industry, not
higher employment as he predicts, because the higher tariff really signified higher
input costs. And it also signified, by the way, retaliation in that sector by other countries as well.
So our auto industry or any other industry that is supposedly facing protection may face
a bit of protection from competitors of finished goods, but is getting hammered with higher prices for inputs and will be
hammered with retaliatory tariffs on exports from our sector.
Now when the researchers studied Net-Net, what happened in 2018-2019 with the manufacturing tariffs, were they protective even of American industry
no matter the higher prices that others paid? The answer was no, not even that. A higher
tariff on a given industry led to lower employment of that industry because the two negative effects that that industry faced higher input costs and
that industry faced more retaliation abroad dominated any direct benefit. All of this is to say,
this is maybe a lot of jargon, but this is to say that Trump kind of put a stick in the spokes of a pretty intricate machinery.
And this is why all over the world, the market valuation went down because we've just seen a huge hit,
not only to US production,
but to global production from this.
It's a mess.
And nobody with basic economic understanding
would have done this.
And if it were not a one person show in the United States now,
if we had a Congress, if we had a process,
if we had deliberation, this kind of thing
would have been stopped a long time ago.
The fact is, the president says emergency, no matter what,
and suddenly has the individual ability
to really mess up the economy.
Can you tell, either from commentary
or from examining the documents that you and I examined,
if any reputable economists advised him?
Or if this is all
his own idea from his own mind?
≫ I think that it was his idea and then the aides run around
like crazy to try to justify what the boss said. There's
nothing reputable about any of the documents. There's a document from the US Trade Representative's
Office showing how these crazy tariffs were calculated. I wouldn't pass a first-year
undergraduate student with a paper like that, much less someone responsible for a $30 trillion economy. There were no grownups there. Nobody. This is a fake. The
whole approach, the calculations, the so-called methodology, and in fact, the entire claim,
including of that spokesperson, that this is reciprocal, that this is the golden rule,
as she said, that this has something to do with what the other country is doing.
They say in the first sentence, we don't know what the other country is doing, so we're just going to assume that they're doing something bad
if there's a trade deficit of the United States with that country. I mean, you just can't make this stuff up.
How irresponsible this is. It's obvious that he did not even use America's diplomatic arms
to consult with other countries because they're not happy.
Here's a montage of them. Chris, cut number 11.
We have a fair and balanced trade relationship with the US.
Negotiations on an economic prosperity deal, one that strengthens our existing trading relationship.
They continue and we will fight for the best deal for Britain. There is going to be an impact on the
US economy which will build with time. In our judgment it will be negative on the US economy, which will build with time, in our judgement it will be negative on the US economy, that will have an impact on us. We are going to fight these tariffs with countermeasures.
We are going to protect our workers and we are going to build the strongest economy.
The tariffs will also hurt consumers around the world. It will be felt immediately. Millions of citizens will face
higher grocery bills. Medication will cost more, as well as transportation. Inflation
will go up. The costs of doing business with the United States will drastically increase.
And what is more, there seems to be no order in the disorder.
President Trump referred to reciprocal tariffs.
A reciprocal tariff would be zero, not 10%.
We believe the recent measures and other broad trade restrictions imposed by the US government
could have a significant impact on economic
relations between Japan and the US, and ultimately on the global economy and the multilateral
trading system as a whole.
Well, US allies, with which you and I profoundly disagree on war and peace, but on this, they're
rational and they're angry, and I think they're correct.
But please weigh in.
Well what's happening is Donald Trump is succeeding in uniting the world against the United States.
And we've actually seen this in recent weeks as some in anticipation of yesterday's actions, though I have to say yesterday's actions were
far worse, far weirder, far more arbitrary, far stupider than anybody imagined. So let
me be clear about that. But there has been, of course, for weeks, the feeling that the
United States is not a properly run country and that things
are not in control.
And what is happening is that other countries are changing their partnerships.
They're discussing among themselves, we can't go on this way.
For example, Korea and Japan, which purportedly are on, quote, the US side, met with their Chinese
counterparts and said, we really need to strengthen our relations together.
Now that's fine with me because they should, they're neighbors.
So I have no problem with that.
But that was provoked by what we just heard from a Japanese official,
that was provoked by the fact that the United States is utterly unreliable from their point
of view. We've had, by the way, again, a good thing in my mind, but a warming of relations between China and India. This too is coming about
because both countries understand there's some weirdness going on in the United States,
and so we should really be on normal terms with each other. This will lead to a warming of relations between Europe and China.
The United States, in other words, is just standing alone.
No friends in this anywhere.
Not our neighbors, not Europe, not Japan, not Korea, not anybody.
Because this is an assault on a basic system of exchange in which the world operates
and this assault does damage to everybody, starting with the United States. We had the
biggest stock market decline because the impact is most negative of all in the United States, but it's negative worldwide.
And so that montage is really a very clear demonstration
of that fact.
No one stood up and said, oh, we, yeah.
When sales drop, whether it's a Monpah store,
whether it's Walmart or whether it's Amazon,
what do they do?
They lay people off.
whether it's Walmart or whether it's Amazon, what do they do?
They lay people off.
There is growing expectations, of course,
of a significant downturn in the US.
There's absolutely, it should be growing expectations
that America's long-term competitiveness
is being deeply eroded by this. Like it or not, we're
handing the leadership in the world economy over to China by creating a high-cost, inefficient
base of operations because normal trade, normal supply chains, normal division of labor is being broken because
Donald Trump in his fervent imagination thinks the rest of the world's ripping off the United States
and he can't understand that we've been on a credit card binge and that's why we're spending
so much abroad. And if he would properly do the job of the US president, he'd get our budget under control.
But he doesn't want to get our budget under control.
He wants to give massive tax cuts for the richest Americans
again.
So all of this is going to be compounded
by a bizarre set of actions in the coming weeks,
where Congress, at the bidding of the president not only will double down on this economic
Destruction of value that we just had today
But is going to slash the health benefits of the poorest Americans the most vulnerable people in our country
to try to make
partway room for yet more massive
tax cuts for the richest Americans in this country. It's not going to solve any problem.
The budget deficits are going to remain huge. The trade deficits are going to remain huge.
We'll just all be a lot poorer and we'll be living in a much harsher
environment. That's what's coming around the corner. The Republican-controlled Senate
voted 51 to 48 to nullify his determination of an emergency. That's not enough to override a veto and the Republican
leadership in the House won't even let it come to the floor, even though there probably
is a majority for it. But short of that, Professor Sacks, what remedy is there for this unilateral
behavior?
I want to say tyrannical, but I realize the statute authorizes
it, but it's a perversion of the statute
because it's not an emergency.
This unilateral behavior, which is so destructive,
what remedy is there?
Well, I think, first of all, the first remedy
is the one that the founders of the Constitution envisioned back in 1787.
Remember, they were responding to a king, King George III, who provoked our revolution
starting in 1776 because Britain imposed taxes on the United States
without our representation.
Well, Trump has just done the same thing.
There's been no representation in the US Congress.
We just had a king who declared an emergency
and then single-handedly broke up the world trading system
with all the damage to the US economy. the world. The world is a country that single-handedly broke up the
world trading system with all
the damage to the U.S. economy.
So the first remedy is, my
God, somebody in Congress could
do their job.
Somebody in Congress could read
article one, section eight of
the U.S. Constitution, which
gives Congress, and only
Congress, the authority to levy duties, tariffs, taxes, that's their
job not the job of the President of the United States.
You read Article 2, the President of the United States has no power to levy taxes and tariffs
is a kind of tax. And this declaration of an emergency is so phony that,
of course, this is a blatantly unconstitutional action. So the first thing is that members of
Congress, if they had any decency and any gumption, would stand up and say this is completely
impermissible. And members of the president's own party
should be saying this because their job
is not subservience to a king.
Their job is to represent the people of the United States
and they're not doing it.
Now, a second possibility is the Article III
part of our government, the courts.
Businesses that are suddenly asked to pay Mr. Trump's taxes should go to court, and
I presume that many will, to say the president has no authority to levy a tax on us.
Every word of the executive order, every claim of the executive order that this is an
emergency, that this is a harm created by others, which is a major argument of the declaration of
the emergency, is laughably false. And so I believe that these terrorists will be challenged
I believe that these terrorists will be challenged up and down the country in the courts. And I think that what Trump has done will be found to be illegal eventually.
So this is a second remedy.
The damage to the United States, to the economy, to the reputation of the United States, to
our foreign policy, will be extremely
severe. But we're not at the end of this story, even in terms of the application. The whole
executive order, from my point of view, is phony. He says, the president with the powers
vested in me, he doesn't have those powers. He can't just wave the word emergency.
You said Biden. You meant Trump.
My God. Did I say Biden?
Yes. That's all right.
No, no, no. Pardon me.
The viewers should know it's after midnight where you are.
Exactly. I have that little excuse, but just to say,
I have that little excuse, but just to say, there is no legal justification.
And the fact that we have, I think,
rather atrocious legislation on the books that
allows for these declarations of emergency
does not mean that you get to use the word whenever and however you want.
Judge, you read the definition in the statute, and that absolutely does not apply in the current circumstances whatsoever.
So I do think that in the end, well, who knows whether our political system continues to function. But if it does
function according to the principles on which it's established, these tariffs are not only
horrible policy, but they're plainly illegal and I would say unconstitutional because they're an assertion of power by the
executive branch, a power that lies exclusively with the legislative branch.
Professor Sachs, thank you very much. It's been a long day and a long week and you're so gracious
to come back on for this hot, burning, contemporary breaking news topic.
All the best to you, Jeff.
We look forward to seeing you next week.
Thank you so much.
Thanks a lot.
That is it for today.
Coming up tomorrow, Friday, the end of the day,
the end of the week,
the Intelligence Community Roundtable
with Ray McGovern and Larry Johnson
at four o'clock in the afternoon Eastern.
Thank you for watching, Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. MUSIC