• tal
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    20 hours ago

    Not your point, but tropical fruits are one of the US’s major food imports, because we have high consumption of them and not as much tropical territory where they’ll grow. Thus, under tariffs, they’re going to be one of the things seeing more-substantial price rises.

    https://www.thetakeout.com/1842020/foods-likely-impacted-by-tariffs/

    14 Foods That Are Most Likely To Be Impacted By Tariffs

    There are a lot of fruits you can buy locally or even grow at home, but some of America’s favorite fruits — like tropical fruits — are largely imported. Take, for example, bananas. The Banana Association of North America is warning that the total cost of bananas nationwide could go up by $250 million per year due to even just a 10% tariff rate. The large majority of bananas in the United States are sourced from Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Honduras.

    I remember a Milton Friedman lecture from the 1970s specifically using banana prices becoming exorbitant under high tariffs as an example of why protectionist trade policy is not a good idea.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0pl_FXt0eM

    Friedman: You know, you could have a great employment in the city of Logan, Utah, of people growing bananas in hothouses. If we had a high-enough tariff on the import of bananas, it could become profitable to build hothouses and grow bananas in those hothouses. That would give employment! Would that be a sensible thing to do?

    • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      Since you mentioned him: I do want to point out that the Friedman Doctrine becoming the de rigueur policy of pretty much all corporate governance in the western world did a whole fucking lot to get us to this hellacious hypercapitalist profit-über-alles society with wildly rampant wealth disparity that we find ourselves in - and that western society developing in that direction played a core role in the authoritarian resurgence we’re seeing across the world today.