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cover of episode It's been a long 100 days

It's been a long 100 days

2025/4/28
logo of podcast Marketplace Morning Report

Marketplace Morning Report

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Paul Krugman
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Zannie Minton-Bettos
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Zannie Minton-Bettos: 特朗普政府实施了历史上最大规模的关税上调,这直接导致国际货币基金组织(IMF)大幅下调了美国经济增长预期。几乎所有银行都预计美国经济将急剧放缓,甚至可能陷入衰退。这种局面完全是政府自身造成的。政府在一些关键政策问题上反复无常,这使得经济前景更加不确定。虽然市场剧烈波动时,特朗普总统似乎会做出让步,但他本质上仍然相信关税政策。因此,未来一段时间内,经济形势将充满极大的不确定性。债券市场和股票市场目前似乎是制衡行政权力的最后手段。股市下跌、债券收益率上升、债券价格下跌以及美元下跌的组合,通常出现在投资者对某个经济体失去信心,并急于抛售该经济体所有资产的弱势新兴经济体中。令人担忧的是,最近几周出现了一些迹象表明,投资者正将这种态度转向美国。如果外国投资者认为美国的品牌形象受损,并大量撤资,那么除了经济增长放缓和衰退之外,我们还可能面临严重的金融危机。 Paul Krugman: 历史上许多国家都曾尝试通过关税来促进国内工业发展,但事实证明,这种做法并不理想。二战后,拉丁美洲和非洲一些国家尝试通过关税推动工业化,但最终效果不佳,并在20世纪80年代放弃了这种做法。依靠关税发展制造业并不奏效,因为它会导致资源错配,生产效率低下,规模小,缺乏竞争力。开放型经济体比试图通过内向型发展制造业的国家表现更好。试图通过关税发展制造业会造成资源错配,因为大多数国家并没有足够的剩余劳动力和资源。只关注国内市场会导致产业效率低下,生产规模小,缺乏竞争力。韩国和中国等国家在经济发展中也使用了贸易壁垒,但更重要的是产业政策和补贴。

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It has been a long 100 days.

From Marketplace, I'm Sabri Beneshour, in for David Brancaccio. Tomorrow marks 100 days of President Trump's second term in office, and we're taking a look this week at what this new administration has meant for the U.S. and world economies in that time. We start today with Zannie Minton-Bettos. She's the editor-in-chief of The Economist magazine, and she spoke with my colleague, David Brancaccio.

A central beat of your magazine over 180 years has been freer trade. So I guess, Zannie, you've lived to see it, the trade revolution before our eyes. I mean, I think you use the word. It is a revolution. It is a revolution. It's a revolution actually beyond trade. But on the economic side, this administration has imposed the biggest tariff hike ever.

probably in history. The IMF came out with its latest projections for growth just a few days ago, and they dramatically downgraded growth expectations for the United States. And the same is true of pretty much every bank. Everyone is expecting the U.S. to slow sharply, perhaps even hit a recession. And this is entirely self-induced. The administration tends to suddenly pivot on some of these crucial points of policy. Do you think this revolution...

is so ingrained now that it's going to stick? So I think there is going to be a huge amount of uncertainty about that because you are seeing that when the markets react very, very badly, President Trump appears to pull back. But I think this is a president who really believes in tariffs. And because we don't really know what the end goal is,

And you have a president who changes his mind, it seems, very frequently. I think the main thing that we can predict with some certainty is that we're going to be in for an incredibly uncertain period. I have been advancing a thesis here for quite a few weeks. Tell me if I'm wrong. Beyond America's legal system, the courts, it seems like the bond market and maybe the stock market, they're

They're the last remaining check on executive power in America. Well, it's interesting. They are certainly, particularly the bond markets, playing a role as a check. And to have simultaneously equity prices fall, bond yields rise, bond prices fall, and the dollar fall is a combination that you don't usually see in the United States. And that combination is something you usually see in a kind of weak emerging economy where investors suddenly lose confidence in the credibility of that

economy completely and just want to get out of every asset that that economy has. And the really worrying thing right now in the last few weeks is that we've seen some hints that investors are having that attitude shift to the U.S. And about a third of U.S. treasuries are held by foreigners. And if foreigners basically think brand USA is damaged and they move out en masse,

That means we could have a very serious financial crisis on top of slower growth and recession. Zannie Minton-Bettos, editor-in-chief of The Economist. Always good to catch up. Thank you.

President Trump has promised that once the U.S. gets through a period of possible short-term pain from tariffs, once we're on the other side of that, they'll usher in a golden age of U.S. manufacturing. But the thing is, this is not a new idea. The world has been here before many times, it turns out. So how did that work out in the past? Paul Krugman is here to talk about it. He's a professor of economics at the City University of New York and Nobel laureate in economics.

Good morning. Good morning. So we are not the first country to try and use tariffs to promote development of, you know, homegrown industry. President Trump's not the first leader to promise prosperity through tariffs. Where else have we seen this in history? You can go back to 19th century America, 19th century Germany. Many developing countries tried to industrialize with tariffs in the sort of 35 years that followed World War II. There's a lot of...

evidence on this. Nobody has ever imposed tariffs this big, this fast, as we're now seeing from Trump. Well, in the cases where it has been tried before, I guess on a smaller scale, in Latin America after World War II and Africa after World War II, how did it work out for them? Well, yeah, Trump likes to talk about 19th century America. But if we look at the experience of

tariff-driven industrialization in the post-war world, it's pretty bad. By and large, countries abandoned that approach in the 1980s because it hadn't panned out. It produced some manufacturing, yeah, but it was inefficient. It was uncompetitive.

It wasn't the root, and it turned out that more open economies, economies that were oriented towards world markets, performed better than countries that tried to build manufacturing by looking inwards. Because I think to a lot of people, it probably sounds intuitively correct that, oh, yeah, sure, let's protect our domestic industry. Let's just make more stuff here.

Why did it not work out in the cases where it was tried? First of all, manufacturing, it's not as if most countries most of the time have lots of spare labor, lots of spare resources. If you are going to build up manufacturing behind tariff walls, it's going to divert resources away from other uses. And then the question is, is this going to be a good use of workers, good use of capital or not?

And if you try to only produce stuff for yourself, if you forego the benefits of international trade, then that industry is inefficient. You're producing things you really shouldn't be producing.

And you end up producing stuff also at inefficiently small scale. So you end up with low efficiency because you fragmented the industry. Is there a way to make it work? And the reason why I ask that is because, you know, Korea, China, they seem to have used a certain amount of trade barriers along with other tools. And they took their economies, you know, from 10 to 100 in just a few decades and

Is there a way to do it? To the extent that they have done stuff, it has tended to be, yeah, there are tariffs, but the really important tools have been industrial policy, has been subsidizing, promoting industries, which can work if you can figure out the industries that have positive spillovers to the rest of the economy. Paul Krugman, professor of economics at the City University of New York. Thank you so much. Thank you for having me on. In New York, I'm Sabri Beneshour with the Marketplace Morning Report.

From APM American Public Media. If there's one thing we know about social media, it's that misinformation is everywhere, especially when it comes to personal finance. Financially Inclined from Marketplace is a podcast you can trust to help you get serious about your money so you can build a life you've always dreamed of.

I'm the host, Janelia Espinal, and each week I ask experts important money questions, like how to negotiate job offers, how to choose a college that you can afford, and how to talk about money with friends and family. Listen to Financially Inclined wherever you get your podcasts.