National Post

Analyst who called trade war sees deal

- LiLLian Chen

NEW YORK • An economist who accurately predicted the rising trade tensions between the U.S. and China now sees a likely resolution of the dispute next year.

A trade deal may be reached at some point in 2019 as tariffs will start to hurt the U.S., Danske Bank chief analyst and China economist Allan von Mehren wrote in a report last week, just before President Donald Trump tweeted that discussion­s with Chinese President Xi Jinping are “moving along nicely.”

Following the tweet, the strategist now sees a 60-percent chance of a positive outcome from a planned TrumpXi meeting at the Group of 20 summit in Argentina Nov. 30-Dec. 1, up from 50 per cent earlier. A positive outcome would mean “a clear framework for negotiatio­n with a list of demands and a plan to go work on them one by one.”

Tensions may yet worsen before a deal can be reached, as Trump is likely to expand U.S. tariffs against Chinese imports, Mehren said. The U.S. is preparing to announce by early December tariffs on all remaining imports from China if talks at the G-20 meeting fail to ease the trade war, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.

“Trump’s goal is a deal. Tariffs are just a weapon,” Mehren said. “The tariffs and Chinese retaliatio­n will also hurt the U.S. economy, so it is not sustainabl­e.”

Mehren said in a December 2017 report that the risk of a tit-for-tat trade conflict over the coming year had increased and that the U.S. may take action in areas such as intellectu­al property rights, aluminum and steel, triggering retaliatio­n by China. Since then, the U.S. has levied tariffs on US$250billion of imported Chinese goods. An escalation of the trade war has driven the yuan to its weakest level in a decade and led to losses of nearly 20 per cent in the Shanghai Composite Index.

Barriers to a possible trade deal remain as Beijing will continue to push ahead with its Made in China 2025 plan, the state-driven strategy to boost China’s hightech industries, according to Mehren.

Mehren’s prediction of a positive outcome from the Trump-Xi meeting this month is more optimistic than other policy watchers. BNY Mellon strategist Lale Akoner said last week the summit won’t resolve any major trade issues. George Magnus, an associate at the University of Oxford China Centre in the U.K. and former chief economist at UBS, said in a series of tweets that markets shouldn’t expect too much from the meeting.

Mehren cautioned time is needed for the U.S. and China to reach agreement.

“A ceasefire is no guarantee of a quick deal. A real deal will take time to negotiate and there are likely to be setbacks along the way,” Mehren said. “Volatility is likely to remain but, ultimately, we do expect a deal to be made at some point in 2019.”

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