Identifying made-in-America goods harder than it sounds
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s push this week to get Americans to buy goods “made in America” is harder than it might seem. Even for Trump. The gold-plated pens the president uses to sign laws are assembled in Rhode Island but lacquered and engraved in China. The Boeing jet he posed with to showcase America’s industrial might is 30 percent foreign-made. The firetruck the administration parked at the White House this week to promote U.S.-made goods gets about 10 percent of its parts from abroad.
Fact is, in a 21st century global economy, few products are exclusively American-made. U.S. manufacturers rely on global supply chains and many people buy foreign goods for the simple reason that they value lower prices.
Even for people who prefer to buy America-only, it is increasingly hard to identify which products qualify as such.
Promoting Americanmade products is “catnip” to politicians, notes Dan Ikenson, a trade analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute. But it comes at a price:
“When people feel compelled to buy local, buy American, they generally spend more money, which means they have less to spend on other things or to save,” Ikenson says.
In his celebration this week of American-made products this week, Trump has yet to acknowledge such nuances. He has argued instead that buying exclusively American will create more national wealth.
“From Day One, my administration has been fighting to bring back our manufacturing jobs and crack down on foreign countries that cheat — a lot of them,” Trump said at a White House event Wednesday with manufacturers. “We will end the theft of American prosperity.”
On Monday, Trump also went beyond saying he would protect the U.S. manufacturing sector. He also pledged a crackdown on “the predatory online sales of foreign goods” that he said are “absolutely killing” U.S. retail stores.
The challenge for Trump is that most Americans put a high premium on saving money, which makes them more likely to choose less expensive goods from abroad.
Last year, an Associated Press-GfK poll found that Americans said they preferred to buy foreignmade goods over identical American-made goods if the foreign products were cheaper. Asked to choose between $50 pants made in another country and an identical $85 pair made in the United States 67 percent say they’d buy the cheaper pair from abroad.
The survey found that household income made little difference in such preferences. Americans in households earning more than $100,000 a year were no less likely than lowerincome people to say they’d go for the lower-priced good from abroad.