Categories: Snippets

A Protectionist is….

Our long time friend over at Cafe Hayek, Don Boudreaux, has been running a series “A Protectionist is Someone Who…”, one example of which is:

… is convinced that 5-1=6.

Our own conclusion to the statement is:

A protectionist is someone who argues that you should be poorer so they can be richer.

Additional versions and variants are welcomed in the comments. After all, it’s always true that the readership knows more, has greater talent, than the staffing of any newspaper.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Tim Worstall

View Comments

  • A protectionist is someone who thinks that 500 employees continuing to earn 50,000 per year is much, much more important than 300 million consumers saving $100 per year.

    A protectionist is someone who can barely add, cannot multiply and thinks statistics has something to do with beating the odds at Vegas.

  • "A protectionist is someone who argues that you should be poorer so they can be richer."

    When you benefit from government policies you begin to appreciate the merits of those policies, which is the rationale for the lobbying industry.

  • A protectionist is someone who thinks that a manufacturing job that produce $200,000 to $500,000 output in goods per year is better for the economy than an Uber driver that provides $20,000 per year in services.

  • A protectionist is someone who thinks trade policy ought to favor the interests of people who actually work for a living over the interests of Wall Street bankers, welfare queens, and tenured professors.

  • A free trader is someone who argues that if the poor cannot afford to eat bread, then they should eat cake instead.

  • Warren - as free trade is simply more trade - a bigger marketplace - please explain how this could possibly make bread, or anything else, more expensive.

    • Easy: free trade lowers the real wages of scarce labor factors of production. In the USA, that's also known as the working class--workers who mostly don't have college degrees: the majority of American workers IOW. Google the Stolper-Samuelson Theorem sometime.

      • Unskilled labour isn't scarce, and Stolper-Samuelson doesn't model the effects of reducing the prices of goods and services on real wages.

  • A protectionist is someone like WP who can comfortably afford to soak up a one hundred per cent increase in the price of washing machines and air conditioners, and expects everyone else to follow his noble example.

  • Whether or not WP (or anybody else) can afford a more expensive washing machine is not really important here. What is important is that the extra dollars he spends on it can't be spent on anything else. So- instead of a washing machine + a nice dinner out with friends, all he has is a washing machine. And multiplied by enough washing machine buyers, maybe the restaurant has to lay off a couple of workers. I'm sure the washing machine companies are happy, though.

Share
Published by
Tim Worstall

Recent Posts

The BBC and terrorism

The language we use matters - it provides clarity to our own thoughts and enables…

3 years ago

We Should Pay Medical Personnel For Each Procedure They Perform

It is now generally acknowledged that the structure of the NHS needs to be overhauled…

3 years ago

The Scrubbers Are Failing

In the film Apollo 13, a loss of oxygen causes the crew to start inadvertently…

3 years ago

Wondering whether an idea is actually correct or not

There's an idea out there which seems intuitive but then so many ideas do seem…

4 years ago

Is Cryptocurrency Our Revolution, Or Theirs?

When we think about the darkly opaque goals of modern central bankers as they relate…

4 years ago

Playing The Mischief With Us

As the papers recently filled with the distressing images of desperate souls looking to escape…

4 years ago