Graphic detail | Daily chart

A Trump trade agenda

Donald Trump's trade proposals would hurt the very working-class voters who elected him

By THE DATA TEAM

“WE DON’T win at trade,” Donald Trump frequently told supporters during his presidential campaign. America, he claimed, was “getting killed” by China, Mexico and Japan. On the campaign trail, pundits often dismissed such trade-bashing rhetoric. In particular, his comments about Japan—which by his reckoning sells America cars “by the millions” but buys “practically nothing” in return—were mocked as an outdated throwback to the 1980s. But with just weeks to go until he enters the White House, Mr Trump’s trade policies must be taken seriously. And they are no laughing matter.

Mr Trump has long argued that American firms are victims of a rigged trading system. To even the playing field, he has pledged to impose a 45% tariff on imports from China, which he said manipulates its currency to gain an unfair advantage. He has also promised to slap a 35% tariff on goods from Mexico, a destination for outsourced American jobs. The president-elect has vowed to renegotiate existing agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement, which he called the “worst trade deal ever”, and to pull out of nascent deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. Under a Trump administration, America could even conceivably withdraw from the 164-member World Trade Organisation, which Mr Trump has described as “a disaster”.

More from Graphic detail

Who is supplying Russia’s arms industry?

New research traces the origin of crucial imports

After Dobbs, Americans are turning to permanent contraception

More young women are tying their tubes


Five charts that show why the BJP expects to win India’s election

Narendra Modi’s party is eyeing another big victory