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Why are tariffs inefficient?

I know the answer (i think). I was listening to the Planet Money podcast and they were talking about the Chinese Tire Tariff and then dove into the economic intricacies about tariffs and their externalities.

I want to hear some real world words about why tariffs are inefficient.

At the country level, tariffs do NOT cause inefficiency in the society. Inefficiency occurs, when Price in the market is away from the equilibrium price determined by Demand and Supply for that product.

In this case, by imposing tariffs on tyres, govt is restricting supply to domestic supply only. So, country's supply curve for tyres shifts left and new equilibrium price is obtained which is higher. But this is still the equlibrium price and at equlibrium price there is never a Dead Weight Loss. Domestic firms will still compete with each other and would produce tyres as efficiently as they can limited to geographical boundaries.

But inefficiency occurs at GLOBAL LEVEL. Some of the resources in China, which were efficiently producing tyres will need to be re-allocated to do something else at less than their previous efficiency levels (this is assuming they were most efficiently allocated in producing tyres).

And resources in the US which could be freed up to do something else, dont get freed up.

Combined, this becomes inefficiency at GLOBAL ECONOMY Level.

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you guys are correct that tariffs create a " subsidy" for domestic producers- giving them an advantage

but i would hesitate to answer the question ' why do they create inefficiencies' with the response " because domestic prices will go up " which seems to be the common conclusion in this thread.

but - for exam purposes - i think ' inefficiency' in this context ( an economic concept) refers to the idea that tariffs - due to the ' protection' they afford domestic producers - cause a certain hidden disincentive for them to use resources in the most efficient way possible. In other words, tariffs naturally reduce competition - competition forces firms to keep costs down, invest in " better and easier ways of doing things' etc etc.

So - tariffs foster inefficiency in domestic firms because it ' protects ' them from it. price increases are a result to be sure - but not necessarily the answer they'd be looking for

just my thots

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varundarji Wrote:
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> by Protectionism u mean...the US govt is
> protecting the local tire manufacturers?


Yes. This is an umbrella term, though. Protectionism can be driven by campaign contributions from industry lobbies.

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Protectionism too.

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by Protectionism u mean...the US govt is protecting the local tire manufacturers?

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Is the US govt trying to encourage local US tire manufactures by imposing import duty on Chineese tires....beacuse as soon as the import duty is levied....the supply is reduced and prices go up....and the local tire manufacturers will now ask for a price greater than if the import dutty is levied....is this correct?

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+1 with Hello Mister Walrus and cfagoal1.

For example, assume Silicon Valley is a country and they are importing tires from Detroit. Now, govt of Silicon Valley bars imports of tires from outside by imposing high tariffs on them.

In that case, Silicon Valley will have to produce their own tires. This takes their resources / man power away from technology, which they are more productive at. This diversion of resources to less productive work increases inefficiency in the economy as a whole.

Assumption: productivity of Silicon Valley workers is higher in technology than in tire making.

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cfagoal2 Wrote:
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> because they reduce supply to below equilibrium
> level, driving prices up and lowering output
> quantity, thus creating a deadweight loss



Are they reducing supply, or increasing demand for a certain product in a broader category.

For the record I only use Michelins.

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because they reduce supply to below equilibrium level, driving prices up and lowering output quantity, thus creating a deadweight loss

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