Knight
Well-known Member
June 2014 Pres. Obama celebrating the reciprocal Trade Agreement act that replaced the Smoot Hawley Tarriff act.
Eighty Years After the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act
Today marks the 80th anniversary of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act (RTAA), a new approach to trade policy passed by the New Deal Congress and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The RTAA was the first time Congress and a President worked together to enact trade negotiating authority to help pass new trade agreements that would increase exports and support new job creation. Through the RTAA, Congress set the framework for international trade negotiations AND EMPOWERED THE PRESIDENT TO EXERT AMERICAN LEADERSHIP IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM.
Though the world has changed dramatically since FDR enacted the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, the basic promise of trade remains the same. Done right, trade policy gives American workers the chance to compete on a level playing field, and under TPA, Congress and the Administration work together to guide trade with global partners by setting goals and standards that represent American interests and values.
https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-of...-years-of-the-Reciprocal-Trade-Agreements-Act
Causing chaos with the tariffs being good or bad. As MACKTEXAS pointed out well see what comes in the weeks ahead.
Eighty Years After the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act
Today marks the 80th anniversary of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act (RTAA), a new approach to trade policy passed by the New Deal Congress and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The RTAA was the first time Congress and a President worked together to enact trade negotiating authority to help pass new trade agreements that would increase exports and support new job creation. Through the RTAA, Congress set the framework for international trade negotiations AND EMPOWERED THE PRESIDENT TO EXERT AMERICAN LEADERSHIP IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM.
Though the world has changed dramatically since FDR enacted the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, the basic promise of trade remains the same. Done right, trade policy gives American workers the chance to compete on a level playing field, and under TPA, Congress and the Administration work together to guide trade with global partners by setting goals and standards that represent American interests and values.
https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-of...-years-of-the-Reciprocal-Trade-Agreements-Act
Causing chaos with the tariffs being good or bad. As MACKTEXAS pointed out well see what comes in the weeks ahead.