Hey Toad, figured I should put up or shut up. In my own defence, the day after I spent hours looking up facts and figures, and rewriting out the trade deficit numbers and associated data in linear form because I didn't like the way the were presented in the article. About halfway through I hung up my connection to make a phone call, and subsquently clicked "Submit Reply". I lost the entire post and lost all will to recreate it. That being said...
It's not surpising to me that the author got higher numbers for GDP when there was a large trade deficit. The question is where are the numbers higher and how does that benefit the US?
GDP = consumption + investment + exports - imports
Seeing as we are dealing with a trade deficit situation, imports will more than cancel out the exports so...
GDP = consumption + investment - imports
So if GDP is increasing there must be an increase in consumption and investment against the increase in imports.
Consumption to investment is generally excepted to be at a 2 to 1 ratio. If we assume that all imports are invested or consumed and we have further consumption and investment (of domestic product) than we see an increase of GDP.
But how exactly does consumption directly help the growth of the economy. It doesn't. One can assume that if more people are consuming than the business that are producing product are making more profits to reinvest in the busines or whereever. But this already calculated for in the "investment" part of the equation.
What's more if we apply the 2 to 1 ration to the deficit imports, than in a given year the investment part of the trade deficite has to return 66% on the investment before it breaks even.
In regards to manufacturing output and unemployment, first of all they are both lagging indicators. So we would have to see them in linear format to make sense of them. I'm not up to doing it again right now, but perhaps in the near future.
Secondly, the author is trying to show correlation, not causation. There are other factors to take into account, like government deficit. Reagen went massively into debt during the 80's. But you can always do into debt to increase manufacturing and decrease unemployment, but that is still stuff you are paying for.
There is no economic crisis as long as the system holds. If the world world keeps paying for US standard of living forever than you guys are fine. But between the last post and this the numbers for the US trade deficit came out for 2004. It has inceased by 24%! over 2003.
Central banks lose faith in the USD. USD goes down. Fed prints off more to keep the US public in cheap goods. USD goes down more. Central banks lose more faith. It seems to me like a downward spiral.