True Protectionism vs Crony Capitalism, Part 3: Implementing Economic Nationalism and Reindustrializing the West

So given what we learned in part 2 about capital accumulation, the role of human capital in that process, and the nature of genetics and intelligence, what is the best way for the West and East Asia to help not only themselves but the entire world in the long run? Well, by keeping their homelands as White or East Asian as possible and by preventing the offshoring of capital from those homelands to the Third World. The first, while even more important than the second, is largely a matter of obvious policy changes (kick the illegal aliens out, followed, perhaps more gradually, by all the remaining non-Whites, stop them from coming back, etc.) that have been well covered by others and it’s unnecessary to rehash them here, so my focus will be on the second.

As for undoing the damage of decades of offshoring, part of the solution, as Paul Craig Roberts has repeatedly pointed out, will involve repealing the tax incentives favoring offshoring:

Instead of tariffs, the income tax should be used. US corporations that produce domestically using American labor—not H-1B and L-1 imported labor—should have a lower tax rate. US corporations that produce abroad with foreign labor goods and services sold in the US should have a higher tax rate. The tax rate should be high enough to more than offset the lower labor and regulatory cost of producing abroad for American markets.

This is indeed a good starting point, but without tariffs as well it is a no-go in the long run because without tariffs on foreign goods, you leave open the possibility of American capital simply switching from American companies to investing in, say, Chinese companies or companies nominally owned by Chinese citizens (which would not be subjected to taxes on US companies) that sell to America; also, since money can easily flee, you could have our oligarchs simply taking dual citizenship in one of these countries or even becoming full citizens of them and then enjoying their profits from the American market there. They might even be able to obtain sweetheart tax rates or dual Chinese/[minor country that’s a tax haven] citizenship using their wealth to bribe the right officials. But with tariffs in place as well, as I shall show below, this problem is preempted.

In addition, a system of tariffs designed to equalize labor costs between two trading countries should be put into place, this being the part of an economic nationalist program that most of those who have heard the term protectionism think of it as relating to—though most of them have only a vague idea of how such a tariff system can work and should work. And that, in turn, allows the crooked and/or stupid pols to pass off as true protectionism what is actually crony capitalism. To see the difference, let’s show how true protectionism (what I call veraprotectionism) works, which can be summarized as:

  • Measuring the average cost of production in the country you’re trading with, determining what percentage on average of it is labor costs, and using tariffs to equalize the cost of labor between the two countries. You might also do this with costs associated with one country having laxly enforced or nonexistent environmental regulations (not the crazy, screaming Greta Thunberg kind, mind you, but the kind that would punish a company for, say, dumping formaldehyde into a nearby river to save money on disposal).
  • Making the rate needed to equalize labor (and possibly environmental regulation) costs apply uniformly to at least all manufactured goods and possibly all goods period.
  • If raw materials and agricultural products are not included in the equalization rate, apply a revenue tariff rate to them to generate funds for the (hopefully small and limited) government.
  • If the country has higher labor and/or environmental costs than yours, apply a revenue tariff rate uniformly on its exports to you.
  • Use market incentives and private enterprise as well as (small numbers of) government officials to enforce the tariff collection and minimize potential corruption.

Recall the graphic from part 2:

Let’s assume that average costs of producing a given product within the two countries are such that in the first country the product that could be sold in the home market for $100,000 costs $95,000 to produce, whereas in producing it in the second, for sale in the first at $100,000, costs only $75,000. With such a differential, the stampede to offshore will be all but inevitable—unless there is a tariff in place.

Were we to add a tariff of 27% (the average cost difference between the two countries is $20,000, which is $20,000 ÷ $75,000 = .2666 rounded to 27%, so $75,000 x 27% = $20,250, and $75,000 + $20,250 = $95,250, which is over due to rounding but close enough) to all manufactured goods from the second country, the costs of producing our example product there would be the very same as producing it here and there would be no incentive to offshore production. Again, we’re assuming the only difference in average costs between the countries is due to difference in average labor costs.

THIS is how true protectionism works. Save for cultural concerns (which, again, we’ll be covering in a separate paper), it aims for nothing more and nothing less than intensifying the accumulation of capital per capita by preventing, through tariff barriers, cheap labor in a foreign nation from siphoning off capital from our nation where labor costs are higher. The beauty and elegance of a labor-cost equalizing tariff lies in how, once the system is in place, consumers can choose any item they want based on price. In that way, it does not lead to economic inefficiency for the country implementing it, since foreign products that are truly superior relative to their price for whatever reason—be it for technological prowess (as with German cars) or a cultural and traditional mastery of the creation process (as with Persian rugs)—will get through and be preferred by the country’s consumers.

Because veraprotectionism goes by labor costs, it has the greatest effect on manufactured goods (where labor is so often a relatively high percentage of total costs) and the least effect on agricultural products and raw materials (where land is by far the most important and priciest factor of production). In that way, veraprotectionism very closely (and ironically) resembles the free trade of classical economists, whose examples were virtually all based on agricultural or animal-based products and assumed the immobility of capital across borders. And, indeed, veraprotectionism as I define it is designed to allow nonmanufactured goods to get through easily, with just enough taxation to fund a government very limited in its scope.

The other way to do this (which would also constitute a veraprotectionism policy) would be to make raw materials and food or agricultural products duty free and apply the equalization rates only to manufactured goods. That would lower producers’ costs and make your manufactured goods more competitive, but it might lower tax revenue below the level needed to fund even a minimalist government and thus force it to rely on other forms of taxation which both cost more to collect and are more intrusive, such as the income tax, and thus hurt the economy and citizens overall.

The alternative, a kind of voluntary protectionism on the part of individuals, in which they freely choose to buy American-made products only and convince others to do so by moral suasion, might be the only kind that the diehard free traders such as the Austrians would find acceptable—ideologically they could have no grounds for complaining since it would be totally voluntary and therefore not statist; but such a proposal would be not only extremely foolish and wasteful but also ironic to an extreme degree, because of the way it would have American consumers implicitly try to do what the Austrians would explicitly condemn them for trying to do in another context: that is, the Austrians ask consumers to, like the socialist central planners that they all rebuke, make micromanaging decisions about what goods in the economy ought to be produced in a context where their decisions would be based on knowledge too limited to make such decisions with any degree of success or economic efficiency.

Under veraprotectionism, on the other hand, they just buy what they want based on the goods’ qualities and prices, safe in the knowledge that the tariff schedule is keeping capital accumulation at home. To be clear, most of the Austrians would likely say that the people are being extremely foolish to try their “Buy American!” voluntary protectionist system at all; but I still find it amusingly ironic that the Austrians’ ideology would force them to rebuke my system, which is actually rather similar to the system of free trade described by the 19th-century writers (in that it is a system in which agricultural goods and raw materials get through at most at revenue-tariff rates while capital does not freely flow across borders). At the same time, they would admit the legitimacy of a system much closer to the socialism that they all deplore.

It is important to note that veraprotectionist tariffs do NOT keep capital from going abroad; rather, they keep the level of capital per capita rising until it hits the point of producing a spillover effect.

What’s that?

It’s what happens when the value of selling capital to a foreign nation exceeds the value of keeping and using it at home. This could happen for one (or more) of several reasons:

  • The capital goods being exported from the US will be used by companies with economic efficiency that is due to something other than the cheaper labor cost there, and whose products are therefore able to successfully compete with our own in our own markets despite the tariff rates.
  • Enough time has passed and enough capital has accumulated at home that the last tariff rate is no longer enough to keep capital from flowing abroad or it will likely be used to sell products in the country that produced that capital: e.g., if the tariff is readjusted every five years and at three years the home economy has gone from having real wages that instead of being 10 times a poorer nation’s are 11 times that (the former being what the tariff rates were designed to compensate for), goods that once were unprofitable to produce there to sell here are now profitable. Of course, whether companies will begin offshoring and to what extent depends on the profits they anticipate making in the time between the new tariff and the next scheduled tariff adjustment (and what options they have for using their offshored factories after the adjustment). Their question then is whether the new tariff regime will be enough to make the move worthwhile.
  • Technological improvement makes old but usable and fairly efficient machinery cheap enough that poorer nations find it worth the cost to buy it.
  • There are others but those are the major ones that come to mind.

So even an economic nationalist (and White nationalist, for that matter) like me does not in any way intend to and would not be able to hurt foreign nations with my veraprotectionist policies; those like me wish only to, in keeping with the nationalist notion that a nation (and/or race, for a White nationalist) is just the family writ large and ought to be treated like it, help their own above and before they help others. And as I’ve shown earlier, those policies do help others in the world, albeit unintentionally and indirectly.

With that in mind, it ought to be noted that veraprotectionism is easily made part of the policy of a truly Christian nation, given that it adheres to Golden Rule standards: all nations are persuaded to set equalization tariffs (or nominal, revenue-generating ones if the country they’re trading with has higher labor/regulatory costs than they do); hence, it is both inherently nationalist and universalist at the same time. Encouraging this international system won’t lead to peace, but if embraced by most nations (unlikely, but one can hope), it will remove some of the hypocrisy and irritations inherent in the present system that give politicians convenient excuses to demonize their fellow elites abroad to the rubes at home.

Also, just as important is the fact that veraprotectionism’s method leaves no room for government favoritism; you just set one rate per country you’re trading with and that’s it: no special treatment for politically well-connected industries; no lobbyists swarming DC like a plague of locusts seeking exclusive or extra protection for their industries; no central planning of any kind!

Protectionism as Crony Capitalism

This is why most of what the political classes sell as protectionism is actually crony capitalism. In their model, specific industries are designated—by themselves, of course, mostly in conjunction with their most important donors—for specific amounts of protection, often in a fashion that’s economically arbitrary but based on “rational” political calculations. By such means is the economic nationalist’s noble quest for renewal and reindustrialization of his homeland turned into just another political racket and mutual grift by the public and private sectors. Under the veraprotectionism system of one uniform rate per country, on the other hand, the pols and their cronies are left out in the cold: the former can do nothing for the latter, and if they want their industries to benefit from the veraprotectionist tariffs, they will have to make them state of the art such that their efficiency is far above that of those of the majority in the countries we are trading with, and hence with labor costs equalized, the American firms’ products are cheaper and of better quality than their foreign competitors.’ Under such a system, men with money to invest will not be tempted to fleece their fellow countrymen by either gaming the political system or offshoring our capital stock and will focus on gaining an edge over their domestic and foreign (from high-IQ, high-capital levels countries) competition by using research and development to develop better and better capital, which aids both their homeland and other nations as well via the spillover effect (that is, as we begin to replace our old capital with ever more efficient versions, we sell that old stock for cheap to the poorer foreign nations that can then upgrade theirs). Again, this is more to the benefit of the entire world than free trade. If the standard version of protectionism is able to achieve anything near this, it’s not for lack of trying by the political classes, who seem pathologically determined to corrupt any good idea someone may devise. The less government involvement the better. And veraprotectionism keeps government interference to a bare minimum—even in its enforcement mechanism!

You see, knowing how corrupt and/or incompetent pols and bureaucrats can be, I designed the enforcement mechanism for veraprotectionist tariffs to rely on private-sector competition. The bureau or department that would handle collecting tariff duties has agents to perform the collections, but for verification of the accuracy of the goods and monetary values declared, those bureaucrats rely on both the importers and (much more critically) inspectors on the payroll of their competitors or anyone else who would stand to gain from their loss. The penalty for lying about goods imported could go something like this: the first time you are fined five times the value of the goods that you lied about, the second time (if it occurs within the same three-year period; the slate is wiped clean every three) the fine is ten times of the value of the goods, and the third time your company loses its importing license for good. The exact penalty is debatable. What is not is that it must be high enough to make it not worth the risk to try to skirt the system but not so high as to make it safer—given that mistakes are made and if the first strike were your last, human error would prove fatal—for companies to create dozens small companies that each apply for licenses. Ports that handle foreign imports are to be open to a large number of inspectors, some of which will be from other importers, whether large or small, who are direct competitors of the companies they will inspect (and thus would, unlike bureaucrats, stand to gain more from pointing out cheaters—and thus knocking them out of the pool of competition—than from accepting bribes to look the other way). Of course, to ensure that competitors do not resort to sabotage—say, planting cocaine in with some of the goods—all inspectors are required to wear cameras and microphones at all times during inspections.

Such a preference for free market forces ought to be the default for any true economic nationalist (as opposed to crony capitalist), with deviation from natural market forces considered only when necessary and justified by a rigorous economic analysis. The reason protectionism is necessary is that without it there exists a tragedy-of-the-commons–type scenario in which even if everyone could know the damage to national wealth done by exporting capital to countries with cheaper labor costs (and often with much lower average IQs), the move by companies who value profit over nation will also be utilized by the more scrupulous since doing so is the only way they can compete with those who don’t care. There is no way for the free market to overcome such tragedy-of-the-commons forces—which is precisely why government intervention in the form of tariffs is necessary. Where there is a free-market solution that works just as well (or better, as is usually the case), that should always be preferred.

For it must never be forgotten that the economy that you seek to protect, for economic nationalist or crony capitalist reasons, behind tariff walls is only as powerful as its human capital and institutions and will be riddled with as many flaws as nature and/or man will allow: trap a crony capitalist economy riddled with the inefficiencies that result from unnecessary government intervention and you’ll have a garbage economy that tariffs will have no power to make into an economic dynamo. Such is why the Peronist disaster that those who oppose protectionism constantly make reference to was the way it was: it was a hot mess of not only tariffs—which were not even necessary in the case of a county that in Peron’s time had enough of a lower average IQ and cheaper enough labor costs that siphoning off capital from the free-trading US would have been a better, faster route to increasing prosperity—but massive, inefficient labor unions and a bevy of interventionist laws and regulations that hamstrung the economy to a ludicrous degree. Under such conditions, tariffs would have no chance of producing prosperity. Therefore, it is absolutely critical that those who seek to protect their economy from capital drain take care to ensure that what they are protecting within their tariff walls is worth protecting.

Transitioning to a Veraprotectioniat System

What remains is for us to discuss the best way to transition, with the least pain and most gain, from our current state to one fully implementing the veraprotectionist system.  To begin, we must note that we do not need a kind of economic shock therapy such as was forced on Russia in the early ‘90s in which everything is done rapidly and harshly, either out of incompetence or (as in that case) to allow politically connected oligarchs to make out like bandits before anyone out of the loop has a chance to react. Trump may be right to use massive tariff increases as political tools to help end the immigration crisis, but such an approach to solving economic problems is like trying to use a 10-pound sledge hammer to fix a bent fender on a bicycle. Rather, what is needed is for Trump and his most trusted economic advisors to use various media to lay out a complete veraprotectionist plan, including its schedule of tariff increases: this should involve tariffs that begin extremely low and gradually increase over a period of time, say one to three years, till they reach the point of labor (and possibly regulations) equalization. This will serve several purposes:

  • It will allow Trump et al. to concentrate in the near term on the ultimately more important task of rounding up and deporting all of the 20 million or so illegals that “Biden” let into the country: this in and of itself will be indirectly most useful for the veraprotectionism program since it will greatly lower housing and other costs and thus allow the average consumer to see lowering prices and rising real incomes across the board even with the slight increase in prices in the short term that the tariff increases will cause. This will prevent the Dems, MSM, and their oligarch allies (the latter having grown fat off the offshoring craze) from using the temporary price increases which even veraprotectionist tariffs will entail to turn voters against the program in the time leading up to the ‘26 elections.
  • By laying out the plan in full and implementing it over several years, Trump and his team can give everyone time to rationally adjust to the changes:
    • By having tariff rates start out small and increase gradually, there will develop a step-by-step process by which a few types of businesses (likely manufacturing in nature) that had not been profitable suddenly become so; entrepreneurs then move into those areas and have time to concentrate on mastering and improving them before another batch become profitable—by which time they will have the profits and expertise from the first set to quickly and efficiently begin moving into and remaking the next set. Suddenly increasing tariffs to very high levels all at once simply unleashes chaos by making far too many businesses suddenly profitable and robbing businessmen of a way to know which they should move into first; it gives them too many rabbits to chase at once, leaves them no time to perfect their knowledge of any individual sector, and makes the whole effort become far more disorderly than it need be.
    • Having the increases be gradual will also allow the effects of much of what painful aspects of the plan must be experienced to be lessened and also spread out over a longer period of time rather than concentrated in the time before the midterms.
    • This also gives consumers and workers time to adjust to the new jobs and new prices (some of which will be higher in the short term). By giving them this time, Trump and his supporters can lessen the chaos and economic pain that ordinary Americans would otherwise strongly experience—and which the vicious elements of the deep state could then use to turn them against Trump.
    • This also gives other nations time to make the adjustment to an economically multipolar world: as the US and Europe (assuming they embrace veraprotectionism as well) begin to reindustrialize, China will see its preeminent status as the world’s factory begin to fade somewhat, this being the flip side of the US ending its Talmudic quest to be the sole writer (and when need be, ignorer) of the unwritten “rules-based order” rules; just as it is fair for China and Russia to demand that the US stop acting like they are Israelis and the rest of the world is Palestine, so it is fair for the White nations to demand that China respect their wish to revitalize their economies—and for all to demand that the plans for the new international arrangement be laid out in full and put into place at a slow enough rate to make the transition as orderly as possible.
  • Doing it this way will give Trump time to implement policies to improve the human capital stock of the nation, which in turn will make the transition much easier and the end result much better.

That last point is especially important and needs to be emphasized as fully as possible. You see, far more than soft times, parasitic times make weak men; that is, in late stages of empires, when force and the inertia of a (weakening) military machine still bring economic plenty, there is a strong tendency toward the dysgenics and parasitism in the general population that has been documented to have been the case with the Roman Empire: we know from historic documents that the Roman welfare state[i] (supported mostly by the grain of its Egyptian holdings) was breeding an underclass even as its upper classes were having fewer children; and from Davide Piffer, et al.’s genetic analysis[ii] we now know that this was producing gradual declines in average IQ that went on until the Empire’s fall. The same thing has happened with the American empire in the post-World War II era when its welfare state, immigration policies, and extensive system of anti-White discrimination gradually lowered average IQ levels and the quality of human capital in general.

While the restoration of the genetic aspects of U.S. human capital will take some time—tossing out the human refuse from the Third World would be a great start—the restoration of the intellectual aspects of it can be accomplished almost instantly if Trump can muster the political will. And here I might find some disagreement with my fellow Dissident Righters. I will here argue that Trump’s attempts to take back the universities and other leftist bastions is a fool’s errand, since those leftists are entrenched in them and can use their allies in the courts to stonewall him until his term expires. Instead, I would advocate that Trump put aside his ego and desire to be a demigod king and put out a national call for those at the state and local levels to create new educational institutions to outcompete and replace the old liberal hives. That way, all Trump and his allies have to do is keep at bay leftist lawfare that might threaten them while the newly formed academic and vocational schools begin cranking out STEM-types and other professionals better, faster, and at less cost than the old institutions ever did. Also, training as many STEM-capables as is efficient at the small, private, and local operation level will make such schools and training programs immune to liberal lawfare efforts from either a de jure or de facto standpoint: the ones that are wholly private and not for profit can’t be sued for discrimination, and even the ones that might be suable will simply be too numerous and spread out for the system to punish without being overwhelmed. And the more the regime tries to destroy such ubiquitous private efforts, the more they look like bullies and tyrants in the eyes of ordinary Americans, especially if Trump leaves their tainted institutions alone; regime overreach and the outrage it will generate can then allow Trump and his allies to use the numbers in the burgeoning state and local efforts to justify not forcing the liberal hives to close or become politically neutral (which would allow them to play the part of politically persecuted martyrs) but to have their federal funding massively shrink to match their growing irrelevance, forcing them to either abandon their vicious ideologies or keep hemorrhaging ever more users to the new institutions and thus justify further cuts to their budgets.

The synergistic effect of both of these efforts will be profound: just as the cost of STEM-level human capital in the U.S. gradually begins to decline with the increase in supply, making producing products in the U.S. less expensive, so the tariffs will begin to gradually make producing goods offshore more expensive, accelerating the reindustrialization process by making more manufacturing ventures more economically viable at a faster rate; both trends moving toward each other like two blades of a scissors will slice through the socioeconomic malaise and restore both white confidence and economic power, and American economic prowess.


[i] Haskell, H. J. The New Deal in Old Rome: How Government in the Ancient World Tried to Deal with Modern Problems. Muriwai Books, 2019.

[ii] Piffer, Davide, et al. “Intelligence Trends in Ancient Rome: The Rise and Fall of Roman Polygenic Scores.” OpenPsych, 21 July 2023, https://doi.org/10.26775/OP.2023.07.21.

1 reply
  1. James Clayton
    James Clayton says:

    The Tragedy of the Commons
    by Garrett Hardin, 1968
    Published in Science, December 13, 1968

    The author is professor of biology, University of California, Santa Barbara. This article is based on a presidential address presented before the meeting of the Pacific Division of the American Association for the Advancement of Science at Utah State University, Logan, 25 June 1968.

    https://www.garretthardinsociety.org/
    https://www.garretthardinsociety.org/articles/articles.html

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