Well, China has NO corporate income tax, NO social security, NO child labor laws, NO minimum workweek laws, NO environmental laws. So how can we compete with that. Either we renegotiate the free trade agreements and bring at least some of our industry back, OR we put tarriffs on their goods, equivelant to what it would cost to make it in America. 45% of everything China makes comes to the US. It is only about 20% of what we import. So cutting off trade with them would affect them more than us. In 1990 before the Free Trade agreements, we had about 20% of workers in manufacturing. Today it is about 10%. If we had the other 10% it would lower our unemployment to around 5% right now. Also, manufacturing jobs paid health care benifits. People working pay taxes so that problem is solved. Simple fact is Ross Perot was right, we are now experiencing the giant sucking sound.
Free trade is great IF it is balanced. For instance if Japan makes a radio for $2, but it cost us $10 to make, and we make rocking chairs for $2, but it cost them $10 to make, then it makes sense to trade with them. We make more rocking chairs to trade with them, and they make more radios to trade with us. Consumers benefit, but we can't do that with a third world country with NO similar laws and regulations.
It also make sense to trade for coffee, tea, bananas, cocoa, titanium, zinc, tin, etc with nations that have it. We do not need to import fuel, which is half our trade deficit and job killing here. We also do not need to import manufactured items, especially ones that kill jobs for low income people.
I live in an area that had 10-12 textile mills within 45 miles from me having about 5,000 employees at one time or another. All provided health care benefits and a high school dropout could work most of the jobs. These type jobs need to be brought back at least some of them.