Business Standard

Trump wanted a trade war, this is what it looks like

- ANDREW MAYEDA & BRYCE BASCHUK BLOOMBERG

In a two-week span, US President Donald Trump ordered up an array of tariffs against numerous countries, blocked Chinese takeovers of US companies and sought new restrictio­ns on future Chinese investment. Economists are warning that the world is on the verge of an all-out trade war, featuring tit-for-tat reprisals, heated rhetoric and appeals to the World Trade Organizati­on, which may be illequippe­d to respond. If Trump’s trade provocatio­ns mushroom out of control, dozens of border-opening trade deals negotiated over several decades could be shoved aside. The prospect of slower economic growth has stock markets worldwide reeling. What is a trade war?

The dictionary says it’s “an economic conflict in which countries impose import restrictio­ns on each other in order to harm each other’s trade.” Trump’s tariffs and the threatened retaliatio­n from other countries meet this definition, but so do centuries of protection­ist skirmishes by numerous countries in countless sectors. The recent escalation is stoking fears that Trump has touched off a full-blown trade war by singling out of China for retaliatio­n for intellectu­al property theft.

The quid-pro-quo actions by the US and China over steel tariffs, Trump’s invocation of national security to justify some of his moves -- which could open a Pandora’s Box of similar claims by other nations -- and Trump’s threat to further punish the EU if it imposes counter-duties also add to the tradewar atmospheri­cs.

What happened in previous trade wars?

One of the most notorious examples is the SmootHawle­y Act passed by Congress in 1930 and often blamed for deepening the Great Depression. The law hiked US tariffs by an average of 20 per cent, initially to protect American farmers but then broadened as other industries lobbied for protection­s. As demand collapsed, countries scrambled to maintain their gold reserves by devaluing their currencies or imposing even more trade barriers. Global trade fell off a cliff.

Who wins in trade wars?

No one, if history is any guide. When President George W Bush raised steel tariffs in 2002, US gross domestic product declined by $30.4 million, according to the US Internatio­nal Trade Commission. The US lost about 200,000 jobs, about 13,000 of which were in raw steel-making, by one estimate. A report by the pro-free trade Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics estimated that Bush’s tariffs cost about $400,000 for every steel-industry job saved. The World Trade Organizati­on also ruled that the Bush tariffs were illegal.

When President George W Bush raised steel tariffs in 2002, US gross domestic product declined by $30.4 million

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