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Our government allows us to "write off" mortgage interest for primary residence. That certainly is a subsidy to the home construction industry. Energy credits for replacing older heaters and windows are as well. The current administration was very upfront about the desired effect that would have.....keeping a segment of the ecomomy going to some degree.
The straw that broke this camel's back was when a boatload of alloys from the USSR landed in New Orleans. It became politically unpopular then for any metals producer to even consider using that product. Instead, the overseas producers sent the steel here so both the US alloy producers and the US steel industry shrunk.
And don't forget, those overseas mills in many instances were built by US taxpayers as part of programs to rebuild ecomomies of our WW2 adversaries. The mills were of the latest efficient design, further spreading the differential. Just like the railroads, if US mills wanted to upgrade or modernize, it was out of their pockets, but with the ability to utilize tax reinvestment credits under programs created to make that happen.
Our tax code's not a really a compelling example, considering its willy-nilly-ness. For instance, the mortgage write-off makes sense as a direct-result economic stimulus. Buy a product from a weakened industrial sector, get a write-off.The energy credits make sense in a secondary manner. By promoting improvement of consumer units, through conservation and off-grid production for individual consumption, the slack national grid is relieved of traffic and we become slightly less dependent on it.But then there's politically or socially-motivated tertiary incidents. Take the tax credit for children. With each person in America, the need for civic services increases in the form of education, engineered infrastructure, public safety, potential for social services, etc. So each child adds to the tax burden, yet individuals who have children receive the benefit of a tax write-off while those without end up shouldering the shared cost. It seems to me it should be the other way around, credit the person who does not add to the network of need.If the domestic production of such product is vital to national security, the federal government has its own system of providing contracts for goods and services to promote the health of that asset. Metals for military equipment would be one such area where we certainly wouldn't want to rely on the Soviets and I can see where US metal producers with or seeking federal contracts might consider not taking advantage of the low-cost materials to politically leverage themselves towards receipt of DOD contracts. Yet the correlation is lost on me as you state it - if no US metal producer decides to utilize (buy) the less expensive product, it goes unpurchased and sits in warehouse, hence there's actually no dumping. Dumping can only occur of the product is purchased, then there's a cause-effect exchange to complain about. Otherwise, there's a game of chicken where the lower cost product sits there and there's a price savings/political suicide fight whether to use it.The US was not the only participant in the Allies' Marshall Plan and US industry, especially the steel and machinery manufacturers, benefited from the Marshall Plan by supplying the materials and technology needed to rebuild Europe. It is no one's but their own that these industries decided to take that income stream and keep it as profit margin rather than reconstituting itself in a more modern manner. Remember though that the Marshall Plan and the US's Mutual Security Act which followed primary aim was not fiscal but political - to thwart the spread of communism across damaged Europe. We shot ourselves in the foot playing world cop maybe, but yet we reap the benefit of it now. Just as we benefit from the likes of federal grant-fueled healthcare and technology developments through a better quality of life, whether other countries reap from it too or not.Back to the Marshall Plan though, remember that the US and Russia were uncomfortable allies to begin with. Russia and its Eastern Bloc brethren didn't participate in the Marshall Plan at the end of the war. Instead the Soviet's created their own version - COMECON. So the example of a Soviet mill we helped build coming back to haunt us is a myth.Let's also not also forget that the US was an ally of China and helped it and most of Asian countries to rebuild their industrial base after WWII as well. Again, we could have simply allowed ourselves to have commercial and industrial dominance, but imagine what the world would be like today had we taken such a tact.
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