Trumping World Trade
Economics / Protectionism Jan 23, 2017 - 11:20 AM GMTBy: Dan_Steinbock
After the  inauguration, President Trump has begun to reset the White House trade  policies. But the consequences of “America First” stance in world trade are  wrought with threats.
  Recently, President Xi Jinping gave a strong  speech about the need for more inclusive globalization at Davos. World trade is  a case in point.
In 2015, world export volumes reached a plateau. World trade is no longer growing. Any major protectionist initiative has potential to make a bad situation a lot worse.
Trump’s trade  appointments and tariff plans
  In the early 2010s, the Obama  administration touted the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which excluded  China. On his inauguration day, Trump announced  US withdrawal from the TPP and promised to renegotiate NAFTA; if Mexico and  Canada would refuse a negotiation, he would have US withdraw also from NAFTA. 
  Trump has promised to renegotiate or reject other US  international commitments. And he has  threatened to use 35-45% import tariffs, while his team has floated 10%  tariffs. The goal is to force some countries, particularly Mexico and China, to  change their trade practices, which he has vowed to challenge with “cease and  desist” letters and greater pressure for intellectual property rights (IPRs).
  Trump's appointments suggest potential for serious trade friction. He selected Peter Navarro, the author of sensationalist  China-bashing books (The Coming China  Wars, 2005; Death by China, 2011; and What China’s Militarism Means for the  World, 2015), to head the new National Trade Council (NTC), which will  oversee industrial policy in the White House. 
  Navarro's anti-China buddy Dan DiMicco, former CEO of  largest US steel company Nucor and vocal free trade critic, became Trump's  trade advisor and former Reagan administration trade hawk Robert Lighthizer,  his US Trade Representative. 
The three will work with Secretary of Commerce, billionaire Wilbur  Ross, who made a fortune by offshoring American jobs and as bankruptcy expert. He  calls China "the world's most protectionist country."
Targeting  US deficit
  Targeting the US deficit Trump has also named Japan as one  of the deficit contributors, which Japan’s Finance Minister Taro Aso has  considered inappropriate. In terms of trade imbalances, “China is No 1,” Aso says. 
  In protectionist initiatives, the blame is in the eye of the  beholder because one country's deficit is another's surplus. Trump’s trade  warriors will begin by singling out nations that have large trade surplus with  the US. That makes big trading economies obvious targets. In 2015, the list was  topped by China ($367 billion), Japan ($69) and Mexico ($61 billion), and  Germany ($60 billion)
  However, they are likely to ignore the size of these  surpluses on a per capita basis. If we take into account the population size,  Germany ($720) is the deficit leader followed by Japan ($543), Mexico ($488),  but China ($262) is far behind. 
  Now, if the Trump administration really is serious about  targeting deficit leaders, it should probably consider a trade war with  Ireland. After all, US has a deficit of $30 billion with Ireland, which  translates to $6,380 in per capita terms - that's 9 times the German and 24  times the Chinese figure, respectively.
In reality, trade deficits are likely to serve as pretexts  for protectionism – even if such policies penalize the rest of the world.
Regional  trade deficits, nationalist tariffs
  Trump's goals may well be dictated by realpolitik. Deficit criticism serves largely as an effort to  undermine European unity (hence his anti-Merkel tirade), the rise of China and  Mexico, and Japanese reforms. In such a win-lose world, "America  First" is not possible through cooperation or even competition, but only by  winning and harming perceived adversaries.
  And yet, historically, US trade deficits did not  start with China, or any other single country. Rather, they are regional and  have prevailed for more than 41 years with Asia – first with Japan, then with  newly-industrialized Asian tigers and recently with China and emerging Asia.
  A single-minded focus on trade deficits ignores the fact  that global economic cooperation is not just about trade in goods, but about  trade in services and high-technology. It also includes investment, which Trump  would like to attract from the very same countries that he risks alienating  with his trade policy. 
And it includes migration flows, which Trump would  like to restrict dramatically, which would hurt US long-term growth, reduce  remittances to poorer nations and boost anti-US resentment particularly in the  Middle East. 
Smoot-Hawley  Tariff Act Déjà vu 
  Trump’s stated protectionism does have a historical  precedent. In 1930, the US Congress passed the notorious Smoot-Hawley Tariff  Act, which sharply raised the cost of foreign imports. 
  While the Tariff Act seemed to work initially, it  soon caused other nations to retaliate. As rounds of tit-for-tat retaliation  contributed to the Great Depression, the way was soon paved for another world  war.
Trumping world trade is a bad idea, but its timing is  even worse.
Dr. Dan Steinbock is an internationally recognised expert of the nascent multipolar world. He is the CEO of Difference Group and has served as Research Director at the India, China and America Institute (USA) and visiting fellow at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Centre (Singapore). For more, see www.differencegroup.net
© 2017 Copyright Dan Steinbock - All Rights Reserved
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