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The decision to join the Silk Road multiplied China’s exports to Italy but did not have the same effect on Italian exports to China, Italian Defence Minister Guido Crosetto said. “The issue today is: how to walk back [from the BRI] without damaging relations [with Beijing], because it is true that China is a competitor, but it is also a partner,” Crosetto added. Italy signed up to the BRI under a previous government, becoming the only major Western country to have taken such a step.
I’m not saying that BRI involvement is a positive for Italy, but balance of trade isn’t normally the metric one would expect to use for determining whether a project is a good idea for a country.
That’s for two reasons.
First: the trade balance with the rest of the world.
When a country exports, it will normally maintain a long-run trade equilibrium with the rest of the world. If I run a persistent trade deficit, then my currency will tend to weaken; my wages will fall in real terms. It will become harder for me to import (since it’s harder for me to afford the things I want from abroad) and easier for me to export (since my labor costs parties abroad less). If I run a persistent trade surplus, then my currency will tend to strengthen, and the reverse happens.
Second, even aside from that, there’s nothing intrinsically problematic in running a trade deficit with specific trade partner; one will tend to run a surplus with another partner in that case. Country A can be a net exporter to Country B, Country B to Country C, and Country C to Country A. In fact, it’d probably be a bit odd if all countries maintained a neutral trade balance with each other; the gains in trade leverages comparative advantage, and unless each country produces the thing that it is particularly good at producing in relative terms and that thing is wanted by other parties in equal ratios, you would expect imbalances with individual trade partners to exist.
In Italy’s case, true, there are a few more complications because Italy is on the euro, but the same process happens, albeit less smoothly.
The way to win via trade isn’t via trying to run a persistent trade surplus with the rest of the world. Take a hypothetical world where a country banned imports, but exports were still permitted. People in that country either (less-efficiently) produce what they would have imported from the rest of the world, or simply go without. Over time, it will become harder and harder to export as the currency strengthens, and those exports will come to a trickle, and then stop, and you have an autarky.
A country overall wins via trade when it leverages comparative advantage – trying to get a given thing that one wants produced as efficiently as possible, and leveraging the fact that different countries can produce things more-efficiently. All else held equal, it tends to want fairly unrestricted trade to do that, including imports.
There are deviations from that. National security may be an externality. I may not want to rely on importing a strategic resource like steel from a country that might be my opponent in a war, for example. But the goal isn’t normally to try to maximize net exports.
A couple of hundred years back, the idea that that was how one maximized a country’s advantage was kind of common in Europe; that was mercantilism. But that was debunked hundreds of years ago.
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Thank you for this post!