Why relying 100% on imports isn’t ideal?
It’s risky during crisis
If a country imports most of its food, oil, or medicine, a war or supply problem can hit it hard. Having some local production gives you a safety net.
It helps the local economy grow
When you make more at home, money stays in the country. Businesses expand and people get jobs, instead of that money going abroad.
It keeps prices more stable
Lots of imports mean you need lots of foreign currency. If you depend less on imports, your prices don’t jump as much when exchange rates change.
But why imports still matter?
They bring lower cost and more choice
Local goods can be expensive to make. Imports often cost less and give people more variety or better quality.
Balance works best
Make essential things locally for security, but keep importing things other countries do better. It’s not about stopping trade, it’s about balance.
How can a country stay secure and grow its economy by relying less on imports for essentials, while still using trade to get lower costs, more variety, and things it can’t produce well itself?
Sometimes a country has no choice but to depend on the exports of another country. They cannot grow coconuts in Germany, for example.
But the resources of a country are important and it is just as important to not make yourself dependent on other countries. Because that will never end well. Producing things inside your own country makes your country safer and less dependent. But the entire world is globalized at this point, so it is not something that is easy to do. Even countries that are completely cut off (almost) from the rest of the world, like North Korea, still depend on certain imports.