I don't know what a "narrative" is. Well it's a story I guess. But I don't have a feel for what the word means.
But just now I was reading Tim Duy and writing, and I read:
I have been puzzling over this from Paul Krugman:A "narrative" is a story. I see it: Krugman is telling one story, and Tim Duy is telling another. I get it now.
Donald Trump won the electoral college at least in part by promising to bring coal jobs back to Appalachia and manufacturing jobs back to the Rust Belt. Neither promise can be honored – for the most part we’re talking about jobs lost, not to unfair foreign competition, but to technological change...Is this the right narrative? ... Try to place [it] in context with this from Noah Smith:
Then, in the 1990s and 2000s, the U.S opened its markets to Chinese goods, first with Most Favored Nation trading status, and then by supporting China's accession to the WTO. The resulting competition from cheap Chinese goods contributed to vast inequality in the United States, reversing many of the employment gains of the 1990s and holding down U.S. wages...Let me suggest this narrative: Sometime during the Clinton Administration, it was decided that an economically strong China was good for both the globe and the U.S. Fair enough. To enable that outcome, U.S. policy deliberately sacrificed manufacturing workers ...
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