Dueling Economies

The United States consumes a large share of its GDP; China, not so much. The result is Yin and Yang. On net, China produces and the US consumes.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent put it this way last week at a Senate hearing – “China has a singular opportunity to stabilize its economy by shifting away from excess production towards greater consumption.”

That is the rallying cry for tariffs and trade negotiations. And while the US government seems to blame it all on China, it is also true that the US has a “singular opportunity” to shift away from excess consumption toward greater production.

John Maynard Keynes convinced a troubled world that markets periodically fail and when it happens more government spending is the answer. On the blackboard, Keynesian economics is pretty simple: Tax those with a high “marginal propensity to save” and give to those with a high “marginal propensity to consume.” And since consumption is almost 70% of GDP, this transfer of wealth will lift growth.

In the real world, it doesn’t actually lift GDP, but it does lift consumption. Since 2008, real consumer goods expenditures are up 62% in the United States. Unfortunately, the most aggressive measure of US “value-added” manufacturing is only up 14%. In other words, because of government policy, the US economy is off kilter. We consume more than we produce…the exact opposite of China.

We don’t know whether China is intentionally taking advantage of the US, or whether US policies are just making it too easy, but blaming the full problem on China is not right.