Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images
President Obama raised eyebrows during the
State of the Union address by vowing to double U.S. exports over the next five years. That's a hefty promise--total U.S. exports in 2009 are estimated at about
$1.5 trillion. Some pundits shrugged off the initial claim as
politically expedient hyperbole, but the White House is appears to be taking the notion seriously. On Thursday,
Obama and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke
unveil plans for how they intend to double exports, which they say will be a major force in job creation. Can they really do it?
- The 3-Part Plan Reuters reports
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke's "three-pronged" plan: "[R]obust
government advocacy for U.S. exporters in
markets around the world, increased export financing and tough
enforcement of trade agreements the United States has already signed to
open foreign markets." Reuters adds, "Obama also is creating an Export
Promotion
Cabinet that includes top officials from [several departments]. Each of
those agencies will be charged with developing a detailed plan over the
next six months for boosting exports."
- The Big Challenges The New York Times's Helene Cooper shakes her head. "The trouble, trade experts say, is that meeting that goal would require
the president to engage in a fight to the death with the liberal wing
of his own party, persuade China to allow its currency to appreciate 40
percent, get global economic growth to outperform the salad days from
2003 to 2007, and lower taxes for American companies that do business
abroad."
- Plan Is 'Doable' So appraises the A.P.'s Jim Abrams. "Exports of goods and services nearly doubled in the 1990s, and
nearly doubled again more recently, going from about $1 trillion in
2003 to more than $1.8 trillion in 2008, according to the Census Bureau
Foreign Trade Division," he writes. "The U.S. Chamber of Commerce estimates that finalizing a free trade agreement with South Korea alone would lead to 200,000 American jobs."
- Plan Is 'Bold and Unrealistic' So appraises Cato's Daniel Griswold. "U.S. exports have not doubled in dollar terms during a five-year period
since the inflation-plagued 1970s, not exactly a golden era for the
U.S. economy. In real terms, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic
Analysis, exports have not come close to doubling during any five-year
stretch in the past 40 years."
- Avoid the Enforcement Canard Cato's Daniel Ikenson warns
against over-enforcing trade agreements. "One of the more persistent
myths about trade is that we don't
adequately enforce our trade agreements, which has given our trade
partners license to cheat." He says enforcement is not really a
problem. "[I]mport growth is much more closely correlated with export
growth than is heightened enforcement."
- Not Very Likely The Atlantic's James Fallows annotated the State of the Union address. Of Obama's promise to double exports, Fallows signs, "Not to be a downer, but: this sounds more like a 'goal' than a 'likely prospect.'"
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