It’s the Economy, Stupid, and It’s Stupid to Think It's Anything Else
It's Not Shocking This Was Omitted From the NYT Piece About Trump's Veterans...
Jewnralism
60 Minutes Act As Handmaids to a Feminist 'Titan'
How Should Republicans Move Forward?
This Welfare Program Has a Bigger Population Than California
The Home Affordability Crisis - Not Fake News
The Limits of Treating Psilocybin As Medicine: Most ‘Magic Mushroom’ Uses Won’t Get...
When Entrepreneurs Strike the Right Chord
The Silent Erasure: The Iranian Regime’s Assault on Memory and Justice
Shutdown Victory Shows What Happens When Conservatives Unite
Ohio: The Hidden Energy Source
Trump’s 'Big Stick' Strategy Is Getting Americans the Drug Discounts They Deserve
COP30 Flounders on the Rising Tide of Climate and Energy Reality
'Full, Complete' Pardons for 2020 Presidential Electors
OPINION

Nature Abhors A Vacuum… Even In Trade

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

The axiom that nature abhors a vacuum applies well-beyond the physics of the universe. Economics is an organic sphere in its own right—where the tinkering of states can have severe consequences. And when the US fails to act to protect its own interests, you can take it to the bank that another state will capitalize on the US’ failure to do so.

Advertisement

So it has been with the global trade in sugar. The US sugar industry, already at a massive disadvantage from its regulatory and tax climate, has called for a worldwide subsidy cease-fire under a new “Zero-for-Zero” sugar policy (a proposal that calls for the dismantling of all global protectionist policies surrounding the sugar trade, pledging that the US will disarm itself when it gets agreements from others that they will do so as well). Coincidentally, India, the world’s second-biggest sugar producer, doubled-down, increasing their taxes on imported sugar by a staggering 50% just days after news of the Zero-for-Zero proposal broke.

India, Brazil, and a handful of nations recognize the America’s competitive disadvantage—their regulatory costs are lower and their corporate tax structures offer greater benefits to their domestic producers. These nations are increasing taxes on imports while providing massive subsidies to their producers (the height of crony capitalism). The end result of this crony capitalism is the eventual destruction of the US sugar business, whose costs (like all businesses in America) have gone up incredibly in the last 4 years—regulatory costs have skyrocketed, fuel costs have skyrocketed, health care costs have sky rocketed.

But unlike other industries, whose prices have either risen (slowly) or remained steady, the dumping of subsidized sugar on the marketplace has caused sugar prices to drop by more than 50 percent in just the past two years. And it would be one thing if consumers were benefiting from these price drops, but there is little evidence to support that since our grocery bills keep going up.

Advertisement

Related:

SUBSIDIES TRADE

No industry can survive if their costs explode and their prices are forced down, which brings us back to the notion of creating a subsidy-free market for sugar – a market where the laws of supply and demand, not the laws of governments determine success and failure.

Currently, Rep. Ted Yoho (R-FL) has introduced the Zero-for-Zero concept as a standalone bill (H.Con.Res.39). American businesses need regulatory reform, tax reform, and real market-based reforms to health care. But those reforms are a long time away—and until that point, we need to ensure that some measure of support is given here at home. We have already seen it: if the US fails to act, other nations will step in and fill that vacuum, exploiting any gap in that defense and using it to their economic advantage (as India did last week).

Yoho’s bill is a good step towards filling that vacuum, and ensuring that our economic defenses remain strong until a free market starts to take shape.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement