Trade
Trade is an essential thing to our Country, and our party will make trade legal with all allied Countries, especially the ones who have the same beliefs as us. We will not permit trade with any untrustworthy country, nor one who has caused major harm to the country and not made up for it (Isis, for example). We will make things needed in trade our first priority, ie; food, oil and fuel, energy, stock market prices. We will also not permit trade with countries who could cause harm to our Country through disease, such as Africa, or Countries that will not help benefit us. Our main goal with trade will be fueling economic growth, supporting good jobs at home, raising living standards and helping Americans provide for their families with affordable goods and services.Trade expansion benefits families and businesses by:
Supporting more productive, higher paying jobs in our export sectors, expanding the variety of products for purchase by consumers and business, encouraging investment and more rapid economic growth. In the past half-century, as trade barriers around the world have diminished, these gains have multiplied and are increasingly shared across different countries and different industries. Among these classic gains from trade are enhanced productivity, increased innovative activity, and lower prices on and greater variety of goods and services for consumers and producers.
One of the NACP’s main goals is to reduce poverty as much as possible by using the authority's demand on trade to make life for citizens in America smoother, and be the best we can possible achieve it. We will use trade to reduce poverty by using the exported goods we get, to distribute to the lower and middle class. After the things needed in trade gets done, we will move on to things that people want for their individual enjoyment and entertainment, ie, automobiles, electronics, music, etc. We will also enhance agricultural trade, and import more goods for the citizens, hopefully lowering the prices of items on markets, making it easier and cheaper for citizens to buy groceries. Our main focus on trade will be with major multi-continents, such as Europe, for the fastest benefit and growth of our Country in the market.
Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam will be our main Countries that we will negotiate in trade with. Foreign trade of the United States comprises the international imports and exports of the United States, one of the world's most significant economic markets. The country is among the top three global importers and exporters. We will continue to use the United States import and export because it is a very effective, sufficient, and beneficial system that has worked for America many years.
United States trade policy has varied widely through various American historical and industrial periods. As a major developed nation, the U.S. has relied heavily on the import of raw materials and the export of finished goods. We will not accept unfinished goods, our policies will only be raw materials that are needed, or finished goods already produced.
Supporting more productive, higher paying jobs in our export sectors, expanding the variety of products for purchase by consumers and business, encouraging investment and more rapid economic growth. In the past half-century, as trade barriers around the world have diminished, these gains have multiplied and are increasingly shared across different countries and different industries. Among these classic gains from trade are enhanced productivity, increased innovative activity, and lower prices on and greater variety of goods and services for consumers and producers.
One of the NACP’s main goals is to reduce poverty as much as possible by using the authority's demand on trade to make life for citizens in America smoother, and be the best we can possible achieve it. We will use trade to reduce poverty by using the exported goods we get, to distribute to the lower and middle class. After the things needed in trade gets done, we will move on to things that people want for their individual enjoyment and entertainment, ie, automobiles, electronics, music, etc. We will also enhance agricultural trade, and import more goods for the citizens, hopefully lowering the prices of items on markets, making it easier and cheaper for citizens to buy groceries. Our main focus on trade will be with major multi-continents, such as Europe, for the fastest benefit and growth of our Country in the market.
Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam will be our main Countries that we will negotiate in trade with. Foreign trade of the United States comprises the international imports and exports of the United States, one of the world's most significant economic markets. The country is among the top three global importers and exporters. We will continue to use the United States import and export because it is a very effective, sufficient, and beneficial system that has worked for America many years.
United States trade policy has varied widely through various American historical and industrial periods. As a major developed nation, the U.S. has relied heavily on the import of raw materials and the export of finished goods. We will not accept unfinished goods, our policies will only be raw materials that are needed, or finished goods already produced.