Trade Policy: Fair Competition in a Global Economy
Document Purpose
This document analyzes U.S. trade policy as a market distortion problem that cuts both ways. Blanket protectionism is rent-seeking — domestic industries using government power to avoid competition at consumers’ expense. But ignoring unfair foreign trade practices — state subsidies, dumping, currency manipulation, forced labor — is not principled free-market policy. It is naive acquiescence to someone else’s market distortion.
The United States does not exist in a vacuum. Project 2029 applies the same principle to trade that it applies everywhere else: correct the distortions, enforce the rules fairly, and let competition work. The goal is not to withdraw from the global economy — it is to compete in it on fair terms, with American workers protected by the Job Guarantee and American supply chains secured by strategic investment.
I. The Problem: Distortions from Both Directions
Protectionism as Rent-Seeking
Tariffs are a tax on American consumers. When a domestic industry lobbies for tariff protection, it is using government power to raise prices, limit consumer choice, and shield itself from competition. This is the same regulatory capture the framework opposes in housing, healthcare, and every other sector.
Scale of the distortion:
- The average American household pays an estimated $1,200-$2,000 annually in higher prices due to existing tariffs and trade restrictions (Peterson Institute for International Economics)
- Tariff revenue comes directly from American importers, who pass costs to consumers. Tariffs are not paid by foreign governments — they are paid by American businesses and families
- Protected industries frequently fail to invest the breathing room tariffs provide. Steel tariffs imposed in 2002 were estimated to cost more American jobs in steel-using industries than existed in the entire steel-producing industry (International Trade Commission)
- Industries seeking protection are disproportionately those with political connections, not those with genuine competitive disadvantages — the same rent-seeking pattern the framework opposes everywhere
The framework’s position: Blanket tariffs as economic policy are a consumer tax dressed as patriotism. Every tariff should be required to include a public cost-benefit analysis: what does this protect, at what consumer cost, and for how long? If the cost exceeds the benefit, the tariff is extraction, not protection.
Unfair Foreign Trade Practices as Market Distortion
The opposite extreme — pretending that all trading partners play by the same rules — is equally inconsistent with the framework. When a foreign government subsidizes its industries, dumps products below cost, manipulates its currency, steals intellectual property, or uses forced labor to undercut legitimate production, that is not “free trade.” It is a state-sponsored market distortion that the framework’s principles demand a response to.
Scale of the distortion:
- China’s industrial subsidies are estimated at $200+ billion annually across targeted sectors (steel, aluminum, solar panels, semiconductors, electric vehicles), creating artificial cost advantages that private-sector competitors cannot match regardless of efficiency
- Currency manipulation by trading partners historically depressed U.S. export competitiveness, though this has moderated in recent years
- Intellectual property theft costs U.S. businesses an estimated $225-600 billion annually (Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property)
- Forced labor and suppressed worker rights in supply chains create cost advantages built on human exploitation — the same extraction the framework opposes domestically
The framework’s position: Ignoring foreign market distortions is not free-market principle — it is unilateral disarmament. The framework corrects distortions wherever they originate. Foreign government subsidies are distortions, and they require a proportional, evidence-based response.
Supply Chain Concentration as National Security Risk
Decades of optimizing global supply chains for cost alone — without considering resilience — have created dangerous dependencies on single sources for critical goods. This is not a theoretical risk; it is a demonstrated vulnerability.
Scale of the distortion:
- The U.S. imports approximately 90%+ of rare earth minerals critical to defense systems, electronics, and green energy technology — primarily from a single country
- Pharmaceutical supply chains depend heavily on a small number of foreign manufacturers for active ingredients and generic drugs. During recent global disruptions, shortages of essential medications exposed the fragility of this model
- Semiconductor fabrication is concentrated in a few facilities in East Asia. A single disruption — natural disaster, geopolitical conflict, pandemic — could halt production of goods across virtually every sector of the modern economy
- The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated in real time what happens when “just-in-time” supply chains meet global disruption: shortages of medical equipment, medications, electronics, and basic goods
The framework’s position: Supply chain diversification is “Investing in Our Foundation” applied to national economic security. You don’t wait until a crisis to discover your economy has a single point of failure. Strategic domestic capacity for genuinely critical goods is infrastructure investment, not protectionism.
II. The Framework: Fair Competition, Not Isolation
Every proposal below applies the same principle: correct distortions from both directions — domestic rent-seeking and foreign unfair practice — enforce rules fairly, and ensure American workers have a structural floor that makes trade politically sustainable. The goal is an economy that competes globally on productive value, not one that hides behind tariffs or surrenders to exploitation.
A. Trade Enforcement with Teeth (Correct the Foreign Distortions)
The United States already has comprehensive trade enforcement laws — anti-dumping statutes, countervailing duty authority, Section 301 unfair trade practice provisions, and International Trade Commission review processes. The problem, as in antitrust, is enforcement, not authority.
Proposed approach:
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Fully fund and staff trade enforcement agencies. The International Trade Administration, U.S. Trade Representative, and International Trade Commission are chronically underfunded relative to the complexity and volume of cases they handle. This is the same institutional underfunding pattern the framework identifies in immigration courts, antitrust enforcement, and every other institution.
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Mandatory cost-benefit analysis for all tariff actions. Before any tariff is imposed or renewed, the administering agency must publish a public analysis: what industry is being protected, what is the estimated cost to consumers and downstream industries, what is the timeline for the protected industry to become competitive, and what benchmarks must be met for the tariff to continue. Tariffs without sunset clauses and performance benchmarks become permanent rent-seeking — the framework requires accountability.
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Targeted, proportional countermeasures for documented violations. When a trading partner demonstrably subsidizes an industry, dumps products below cost, or violates trade commitments, the response is targeted and proportional — aimed at the specific distortion, not blanket punishment of an entire country’s exports. This is the same precision the framework demands in every other enforcement context: address the violation, not the bystanders.
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Accelerated anti-dumping and countervailing duty processing. Current case timelines of 12-18 months allow distortive imports to destroy domestic capacity before remedies take effect. Streamline investigations and implement provisional measures faster, with due process preserved but timelines compressed.
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Enhanced intellectual property enforcement. Strengthen trade secret protection and enforcement cooperation with allies. IP theft is theft — it should be treated with the same seriousness as any other form of extraction.
What this does NOT do:
- Does not impose blanket tariffs on countries — targets specific documented distortions
- Does not create permanent protections — all measures include sunset clauses and competitive benchmarks
- Does not empower political actors to use tariffs as leverage on non-trade issues — trade enforcement addresses trade violations
B. Supply Chain Resilience (National Security Investment)
Strategic supply chain concentration is a national security problem that markets alone will not solve, because the risk is systemic and the investment horizon exceeds what private capital optimizes for. This is the same logic the framework applies to infrastructure: some investments are foundational, and the government’s role is to ensure they exist.
Proposed approach:
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Identify and designate Critical Supply Chain sectors. An independent Supply Chain Resilience Commission (modeled on the framework’s independent commission approach) identifies sectors where single-source dependency creates unacceptable national security or economic risk. Initial designations: semiconductors, rare earth and critical minerals, pharmaceutical active ingredients, medical devices and equipment, energy infrastructure components, defense-critical materials.
- Diversification, not decoupling. The goal is resilience — no single point of failure — not economic isolation. For each designated sector:
- Ensure at minimum two independent supply sources including at least one domestic or allied-nation source
- Build domestic production capacity for the most critical components through direct investment, tax incentives, and procurement preferences
- Maintain strategic reserves (modeled on the Strategic Petroleum Reserve) for materials where supply disruption would have immediate national security impact
- Coordinate with allied nations to distribute production and reduce collective vulnerability
- Strategic domestic manufacturing investment. Direct federal investment and tax incentives for domestic production of designated critical goods. This includes:
- Semiconductor fabrication (building on the CHIPS and Science Act framework)
- Rare earth processing and refining
- Pharmaceutical manufacturing for essential medications
- Green energy component manufacturing (solar panels, batteries, wind turbines) — where supply chain resilience and climate policy align
- Medical equipment and personal protective equipment capacity
- Federal procurement preferences for resilient supply chains. The federal government is the largest single purchaser in the U.S. economy. Procurement preferences for products manufactured through diversified, transparent, and resilient supply chains leverage this purchasing power to drive market behavior — the same approach used throughout the framework.
What this does NOT do:
- Does not attempt to “decouple” from the global economy — resilience through diversification, not isolation through autarky
- Does not protect uncompetitive domestic industries from legitimate competition — targets genuine security vulnerabilities, not political favorites
- Does not mandate domestic sourcing for all goods — only for designated critical sectors where single-source dependency creates unacceptable risk
International precedent:
- EU Critical Raw Materials Act: Identifies strategic materials, sets domestic processing and recycling targets, diversifies import sources. Combines market mechanisms with strategic investment.
- Japan’s supply chain resilience subsidies: Post-pandemic programs subsidize diversification of manufacturing away from single-source dependence. Targeted at specific sectors, not blanket protectionism.
- CHIPS and Science Act (U.S.): Bipartisan domestic semiconductor investment — a model for how strategic investment in critical capacity can attract broad support when framed as national security and economic competitiveness rather than protectionism.
C. Labor and Environmental Standards in Trade (Level the Playing Field)
Trading with countries that permit forced labor, suppress worker wages through government coercion, or impose no environmental costs on production creates a competitive dynamic that is not “free trade” — it is a race to the bottom that undercuts American workers and the planet simultaneously.
The framework’s $25/hr wage floor and Job Guarantee protect American workers domestically. Trade standards prevent the international arbitrage that would undermine those protections.
Proposed approach:
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Enforceable labor standards in all trade agreements. Future trade agreements include binding — not aspirational — labor standards with real consequences for violations. Standards include: freedom of association, prohibition of forced and child labor, acceptable conditions of work, and non-discrimination. The USMCA’s rapid-response labor mechanism provides a working model: complaints trigger facility-level investigations with trade sanctions for verified violations.
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Carbon Border Adjustment. Products imported from countries without equivalent carbon pricing face an adjustment at the border that reflects the environmental cost their production externalized. This is not a tariff — it is the correction of a market distortion. Domestic producers who pay carbon costs should not be undercut by imports that externalized those costs to the global atmosphere. The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), operational since 2026, provides the working model.
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Ban imports produced with forced labor. Extend and strengthen the existing prohibition on importing goods produced with forced labor (19 U.S.C. § 1307). Enhance Customs and Border Protection enforcement capacity, require supply chain transparency for high-risk sectors, and impose meaningful penalties for importers who fail to verify their supply chains.
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Supply chain transparency requirements. Large importers must publicly disclose their supply chains for designated high-risk goods (modeled on the beneficial ownership transparency the framework requires in housing and finance). Transparency enables market accountability — consumers, investors, and business partners can make informed decisions about supply chain integrity.
What this does NOT do:
- Does not impose American labor or environmental standards on sovereign nations — establishes minimum conditions for preferential access to the American market
- Does not ban trade with any country — creates a cost adjustment that reflects the true cost of production, letting the market decide
- Does not advantage American producers unfairly — American producers meeting labor and environmental standards are no longer disadvantaged by competitors who don’t
International precedent:
- USMCA rapid-response labor mechanism: First enforceable facility-level labor enforcement in a trade agreement. Has been used successfully to address specific violations at Mexican factories, demonstrating that enforcement is feasible.
- EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM): Operational since 2026; applies carbon costs to imports from countries without equivalent pricing. Creates a market incentive for trading partners to adopt their own carbon pricing.
- Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (U.S., 2021): Established a rebuttable presumption that goods from Xinjiang are produced with forced labor. Demonstrates that import bans based on labor conditions are legally and operationally viable.
D. The Job Guarantee as Trade Policy
The single biggest political objection to trade liberalization has always been: “it costs American jobs.” This objection has been politically devastating because it was partially true — trade adjustment programs (Trade Adjustment Assistance) were chronically underfunded and reached only a fraction of displaced workers. Communities that lost industries to trade competition often never recovered.
The Federal Job Guarantee changes this equation structurally.
How it works as trade policy:
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Eliminates the unemployment fear. Workers displaced by trade competition — whether from legitimate foreign competition or from trade distortions being corrected — have an immediate employment floor at $25/hr with benefits. This does not make displacement painless, but it eliminates the catastrophic outcome (permanent unemployment, community collapse) that drives trade anxiety.
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Makes trade politically sustainable. When every worker has a guaranteed alternative, the political case for blanket protectionism weakens. Tariffs become harder to justify as “protecting jobs” when jobs are already guaranteed. This is not an argument against protecting workers — it is a structural guarantee that replaces the blunt instrument of tariffs with a precision tool that actually helps people.
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Retraining and upskilling pathway. The Job Guarantee combined with free public college and vocational training provides displaced workers not just with a job floor but with a genuine pathway to higher-skill, higher-wage employment. Trade adjustment becomes a career transition, not a death sentence.
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Community resilience. Job Guarantee placements can be directed toward community infrastructure, green energy transition, and public services in regions affected by trade-related industry shifts — ensuring that trade-affected communities rebuild rather than decline.
Framework integration: The Job Guarantee is the mechanism that makes rational trade policy politically viable. Without it, trade policy is always captured by protectionist rent-seeking because the human cost of displacement is real and visible. With it, trade policy can be based on evidence and national interest rather than fear.
E. Multilateral Engagement Over Unilateral Action
Unilateral trade wars are lose-lose. Retaliatory tariffs hurt American exporters — agriculture, technology, manufacturing, services — and escalation spirals harm both economies. The framework’s approach is the same as its approach to every other institutional problem: build and strengthen the rules-based system, don’t burn it down.
Proposed approach:
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WTO reform, not WTO abandonment. The WTO dispute resolution system is imperfect but essential. The U.S. should lead reform efforts — faster dispute resolution, stronger enforcement of subsidies disciplines, updated rules for digital trade and state-owned enterprises — rather than paralyzing the system by blocking appellate body appointments.
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Allied coordination on trade enforcement. When the U.S., EU, Japan, UK, Australia, Canada, and other democratic market economies coordinate on trade enforcement against unfair practices, the collective market power is overwhelming. No export-dependent economy can afford to lose access to all of those markets simultaneously. This is more effective than any unilateral tariff.
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New trade agreements with enforceable standards. Pursue trade agreements that include the labor, environmental, and transparency provisions described above. Preferential access to the American market is a powerful incentive — trade agreements should use that leverage to raise standards, not lower them.
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Strategic economic alignment with democratic allies. Build supply chain partnerships, technology sharing agreements, and coordinated investment frameworks with democratic nations that share governance standards. This creates a trade bloc that competes on productive value and rule of law — the same principles the framework applies domestically.
What this does NOT do:
- Does not surrender American sovereignty to international bodies — the U.S. retains authority over its own trade policy; multilateral engagement strengthens, not weakens, negotiating position
- Does not require agreement with every trading partner — builds coalitions of like-minded nations that share enforcement standards
- Does not prevent unilateral action when necessary — reserves targeted, proportional responses for situations where multilateral processes are insufficient
III. What This Section Does NOT Propose
Consistent with Project 2029’s principles of evidence-based, market-corrective policy:
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No blanket tariffs as economic policy. Tariffs on entire countries or broad product categories are a blunt tax on American consumers that primarily benefits politically connected industries. The framework uses targeted, proportional responses to documented distortions — not indiscriminate trade barriers.
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No economic decoupling. Attempting to isolate the U.S. economy from global trade would raise prices, reduce innovation, and weaken the economic competitiveness the framework exists to protect. The goal is resilience through diversification, not security through isolation.
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No permanent protections for uncompetitive industries. Every trade remedy includes sunset clauses and competitive benchmarks. If an industry cannot become competitive with temporary support, permanent protection is rent-seeking — the same extraction the framework opposes in every other context.
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No use of tariffs as political leverage on non-trade issues. Trade enforcement addresses trade violations. Using tariffs to coerce changes in immigration policy, foreign policy, or other non-trade areas distorts the trade system and creates unpredictable costs for American businesses and consumers.
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No sacrifice of labor or environmental standards for trade access. The framework does not pursue trade agreements that create competitive advantages for exploitation. Trade access to the American market requires meeting minimum standards — that is the price of admission to the world’s largest consumer market.
IV. Fiscal Impact
Revenue sources:
- Carbon border adjustment revenue: estimated $5-15B annually depending on scope and rate
- Anti-dumping and countervailing duty revenue from enhanced enforcement: $2-5B annually
- Tariff revenue from targeted, proportional trade remedies: variable, but secondary to consumer cost analysis
Cost items:
- Trade enforcement agency expansion (USTR, ITA, ITC, CBP trade functions): $2-3B annually
- Supply chain resilience investment (domestic manufacturing incentives, strategic reserves): $10-20B annually (partially offset by CHIPS Act and existing programs)
- Supply Chain Resilience Commission operations: $50-100M annually
Net fiscal impact: The primary fiscal benefit is indirect:
- Domestic manufacturing investment creates jobs, tax revenue, and reduced transfer payments
- Supply chain resilience reduces the economic cost of future disruptions (estimated cost of recent supply chain disruptions: hundreds of billions in lost GDP)
- Enforcing fair trade rules protects domestic industries that generate tax revenue and employment
- Carbon border adjustment creates revenue while incentivizing trading partners to adopt their own carbon pricing (reducing U.S. adjustment burden over time)
Job Guarantee integration: Supply chain resilience manufacturing, green energy component production, and infrastructure investment are natural Job Guarantee placement sectors. Trade policy and employment policy reinforce each other — domestic production capacity creates jobs while reducing strategic vulnerability.
V. International Precedents
| Country/Bloc | Approach | Outcome | Lesson for U.S. |
|---|---|---|---|
| European Union | Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM); common external trade policy with labor/environmental standards | Environmental standards applied at border without WTO challenge; collective bargaining power exceeds any single member state | Multilateral coordination amplifies trade enforcement power |
| USMCA | Rapid-response labor enforcement mechanism with facility-level investigations | First enforceable trade labor standards; successfully used to address specific violations | Enforceable standards work when they include real consequences |
| Japan | Supply chain resilience subsidies post-COVID; diversification incentives for critical manufacturing | Reduced single-source dependency in semiconductors and medical supplies | Targeted diversification investment is more effective than blanket protectionism |
| South Korea | Strategic investment in semiconductor, battery, and green technology manufacturing | Became a global leader in critical technology supply chains | Strategic industrial investment builds competitive advantage that tariffs never provide |
| Australia | Anti-dumping enforcement with transparent public interest test | Balanced protection of domestic industry against documented dumping with consumer cost analysis | Transparency requirements prevent trade remedies from becoming permanent rent-seeking |
| Taiwan (TSMC) | Decades of strategic semiconductor investment creating dominant global position | Demonstrated that strategic investment in critical capacity generates enormous economic returns | National competitiveness is built through investment, not tariff walls |
VI. Constitutional and Legal Authority
Federal authority basis:
- Commerce Clause (Article I, § 8, Clause 3): Congress has explicit constitutional authority to “regulate Commerce with foreign Nations.” Trade policy is among the most clearly enumerated federal powers.
- Tariff authority (Article I, § 8, Clause 1): Congress has explicit power to “lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises.” Tariff and trade remedy authority is unambiguously federal.
- Treaty Power (Article II, § 2): Trade agreements negotiated by the executive and ratified by the Senate. Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) provides the fast-track framework for legislative approval.
- Existing statutory framework: Trade Act of 1974 (Section 301), Tariff Act of 1930 (anti-dumping/CVD), Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (Section 232 national security), and various implementing statutes provide comprehensive existing authority.
Legal risks:
- Carbon border adjustment may face WTO challenges. Mitigation: structure as an environmental measure consistent with GATT Article XX exceptions; EU CBAM provides the litigation test case.
- Supply chain procurement preferences may face trade agreement challenges (WTO Government Procurement Agreement). Mitigation: invoke national security exceptions for designated critical sectors; existing precedent for defense-related procurement preferences.
- Trade agreement labor/environmental enforcement may face sovereignty objections from trading partners. Mitigation: standards are conditions for preferential access, not mandates — partners can choose not to participate.
VII. Integration with Existing Framework
| Framework Element | Trade Policy Connection |
|---|---|
| Federal Job Guarantee | Structural floor that eliminates trade displacement fear; makes rational trade policy politically sustainable |
| $25/hr Wage Floor | Protected domestically; trade standards prevent international arbitrage that would undermine it |
| Antitrust Enforcement | Global monopolies and monopsonies face the same scrutiny as domestic ones; trade enforcement prevents foreign market concentration from distorting U.S. markets |
| Green Energy / Climate | Carbon border adjustment prevents climate policy from creating competitive disadvantage; supply chain resilience for green technology components |
| Education Investment | Retraining and upskilling pathway for trade-displaced workers; makes trade adjustment a career transition, not a dead end |
| Government Transparency | Public cost-benefit analysis for all tariffs; supply chain transparency requirements; trade enforcement data publicly accessible |
| Institutional Integrity | Trade enforcement agencies held to the same staffing and performance standards as all framework institutions |
| Housing / Cost of Living | Blanket tariffs raise consumer prices across the board; targeted enforcement minimizes cost-of-living impact while correcting genuine distortions |
Related Notes
- [[project-2029]] — Full technical mandate
- [[rational-self-interest]] — Philosophical framework: correcting distortions from all directions
- [[institutional-accountability]] — Institutional integrity principles applied to trade enforcement
- [[housing-market-integrity]] — Same market-distortion-correction approach; cost-of-living integration
- [[criminal-justice-reform]] — Anti-rent-seeking principle applied across institutions
- [[understanding-the-framework]] — “Investing in Our Foundation” philosophy: supply chain resilience as foundational investment
Last updated: May 2026