Did Trump's Trade War Impact the 2018 Election?
We uncover evidence that the US-China trade war was consequential for voting outcomes in the 2018 congressional midterm election. Republican House candidates lost support in counties more exposed to tariff retaliation, but saw no appreciable gains in counties that received more direct US tariff protection. The electoral losses were only modestly mitigated by the US agricultural subsidies announced in summer 2018. Republicans also fared worse in counties that had seen recent gains in health insurance coverage (where efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act may have been more consequential), and where a new federal cap on state and local tax (SALT) deductions disadvantaged more taxpayers. Counterfactual calculations suggest that Republicans would have lost ten fewer House seats absent the trade war, in a similar range to either health care or SALT policies in the number of lost seats it can account for.
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We thank Rob Feenstra (editor), three expert referees, as well as Bruno Caprettini, Teresa Fort, Bingjing Li, Marcus Noland, Ralph Ossa, Kadee Russ, and Robert Staiger for helpful comments. We are grateful too to audiences at the University of Zurich, LMU Munich, University of Geneva Villars Conference, University of Oslo, UC Dublin, the 2020 CES Ifo Global Economy Conference, and the 2020 NBER meeting on International Trade Policy and Institutions. Bashudha Dhamala, Sirig Gurung, Kelley Jiang, and Eva Zhang provided excellent research assistance. All errors are our own. Any views expressed are those of the authors and not those of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
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Copy CitationEmily J. Blanchard, Chad P. Bown, and Davin Chor, "Did Trump's Trade War Impact the 2018 Election?," NBER Working Paper 26434 (2019), https://doi.org/10.3386/w26434.Download Citation
Published Versions
Emily J. Blanchard & Chad P. Bown & Davin Chor, 2024. "Did Trump’s trade war impact the 2018 election?," Journal of International Economics, . citation courtesy of
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