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Economist Peter Schiff, renowned for predicting the financial crisis of 2008, supported Donald Trump during the election season. However, right before Trump moved back into the White House, Schiff sounded the alarm about his approach to a critical issue for America: trade.
At a press conference in Mar-a-Lago, Trump addressed trade deficits with Canada and Europe, announcing plans to impose substantial tariffs to address the imbalance. These tariffs have subsequently caused ripples through the international economy.
Schiff, the chief economist and global strategist at Euro Pacific Asset Management, strongly disagrees with the president.
“Trump’s take on trade deficits is all wrong,” he wrote on Instagram, sharing a clip from The Peter Schiff Show podcast where he elaborated on his critique.
“[Trump] said we have a huge trade deficit with Canada as if somehow that’s harming the United States — it’s actually helping the United States. It’s unfortunate that we’re not productive enough to get by without all those Canadian products,” Schiff explained.
“Donald Trump specifically said we don’t need any Canadian cars, we don’t need any Canadian timber — of course we do! I mean, we build houses, we drive cars. I mean, if we didn’t have access to Canadian lumber or Canadian cars or any of the other things that we import from Canada — America imports a lot of stuff from Canada — what does Donald Trump think would happen to the price of all that stuff? It would go way up,” he argued.
America imports a significant volume of goods from Canada — and it’s not limited to timber and cars. The list also includes crude oil, petroleum products, natural gas, and electricity, among others.
Schiff also criticized Trump’s perspective on trade deficits with Europe, pointing out that America depends on European goods as well.
Schiff didn’t mince words, asserting that by imposing tariffs, Trump “wants to add to the inflationary problem.”