As the U.S. ramps up tariffs on Chinese goods once again, the debate over trade policy has taken center stage — and one name keeps surfacing across leading publications: UBS Foundation Professor
@ProfDavidDorn.
Dorn, along with co-authors
@davidautor and
@gordon_h_hanson, published a landmark 2013 study on the 'China Shock', showing how a surge in Chinese imports profoundly disrupted U.S. manufacturing communities. Their research documented long-lasting job losses, wage declines, and social strain — particularly in regions most exposed to import competition.
Over the past week,
@nytimes,
@WSJ,
@washingtonpost,
@AJEnglish, and
@voxdotcom revisited Dorn’s work in the context of the new tariff policies:
⭐️ NYT and WSJ questioned whether tariffs can truly reverse decades of economic transformation. Both highlight the risk of retaliation, rising prices, and further global instability.
⭐️ Al Jazeera underscored that lost jobs won’t simply return — pointing to technological change and supply chain complexity.
⭐️ Washington Post noted the ideological pivot from free trade to protectionism and warned of long-term consequences.
⭐️ Vox offered a crucial clarification: Dorn’s research diagnoses the problem but doesn’t prescribe tariffs as the solution. Instead, it calls for policy responses that support displaced workers — retraining, education, and social safety nets.
The takeaway? Understanding the nuanced findings of Dorn’s research is key. Protectionist policies may appeal politically, but they risk ignoring the complex, structural shifts in the global economy that his work so clearly maps out.
In a time of rising populism and shifting economic alliances, Dorn’s work reminds us of the importance of evidence-based policymaking. Let’s not confuse diagnosis with cure.
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