Kuwait Times

Trump’s trade pick to take stern stance on China

Lighthizer to be empowered to renegotiat­e and enforce trade deals

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Robert Lighthizer has long complained that the United States dithered in the face of abusive Chinese trade policies, allowing its trade gap with Beijing to explode and American factories to close. Now, the veteran trade lawyer may have a chance to do something about it.

As President Donald Trump’s choice to be US trade representa­tive, the 69-year-old Lighthizer would be empowered to renegotiat­e and enforce trade deals, many of which the new president has condemned as destroyers of American jobs. On Thursday, the Senate Finance Committee postponed a vote on Lighthizer’s nomination because two members from Ohio, Republican Rob Portman and Democrat Sherrod Brown, were attending a memorial service at Arlington National Cemetery for the late Ohio Democratic Sen. John Glenn.

(His confirmati­on has been held up by a political dispute over whether he needs a congressio­nal waiver because he has worked for foreign companies. The delay means Lighthizer isn’t in his job as Trump prepares to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Mar-a-Lago, Florida.)

A fixture in Washington trade policy circles for nearly four decades, Lighthizer has built a reputation as a shrewd negotiator. And like the president who chose him, Lighthizer represents a departure for a Republican Party that for decades favored the free flow of global trade as a boon to economic growth. “I agree with President Trump that we should have an ‘America First’ trade policy,” Lighthizer said at his committee hearing last month. “And that we can do better in negotiatin­g our trade agreements and be stronger at enforcing our trade laws.”

His nomination sends another signal that the Trump administra­tion intends to upend decades of US policy and act aggressive­ly to block imports when it deems other countries to be acting unfairly.

“He’s a trade realist,” Paul Rosenthal, a trade lawyer at the firm Kelley Drye & Warren. “He doesn’t necessaril­y subscribe to free trade as a religion as some people do.”

Unilateral free traders

Lighthizer’s philosophy, Rosenthal suggests, essentiall­y boils down to: “How can we afford to be unilateral free traders when the Chinese don’t reciprocat­e?” Drawing from experience in trade law and his work in the Reagan administra­tion in countering Japanese imports, Lighthizer will likely try to force China and other competitor­s to end what the Trump team sees as unfair trade. Supporters of free trade, such as analysts at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, argue that a TrumpLight­hizer combative approach could backfire. Blocking or taxing imports would raise prices of imports for American consumers and provoke retaliatio­n. The result could potentiall­y be a trade war that would hurt US farmers and companies - from Boeing to Caterpilla­r - that depend on exports.

Lighthizer won’t be the administra­tion’s only trade policy heavyweigh­t. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, a billionair­e investor, is expected to involve himself in trying to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico and other trade issues. And Trump named Peter Navarro, a vociferous critic of Chinese trade policy, to lead a new White House National Trade Council.

Could Lighthizer be overshadow­ed?

“The words ‘overshadow’ and ‘Bob Lighthizer’ shouldn’t appear in the same sentence,” says Clyde Prestowitz, a Commerce official in the Reagan administra­tion and a longtime critic of US trade policy. Lighthizer has more congressio­nal contacts and more experience with the fine points of trade law than Navarro or Ross. In 2008, he wrote a column in The New York Times criticizin­g Sen. John McCain, the Republican presidenti­al candidate, for his unstinting support of free trade. Lighthizer noted that “conservati­ve statesmen from Alexander Hamilton to Ronald Reagan sometimes supported protection­ism.” “They always understood that trade policy was merely a tool for building a strong and independen­t country with a prosperous middle class,” he wrote. Lighthizer’s confirmati­on vote had been delayed by a political rift: Some Democrats argued that he must obtain a waiver from Congress because he has worked in the past for foreign clients. They said they would support the waiver only if Republican­s pass an unrelated bill to protect the endangered pension and health care benefits of retired coal miners.

Lighthizer served as a top aide on the Senate Finance Committee under Sen. Bob Dole in the late 1970s and early 1980s and later as treasurer of Dole’s 1996 Republican presidenti­al campaign. (The 93-year-old Dole introduced Lighthizer at his committee hearing.) Under Reagan, Lighthizer served as deputy trade representa­tive. Despite Reagan’s reputation as a stalwart supporter of free trade, his administra­tion seldom hesitated to pressure US trade partners if it thought American manufactur­ers were being hurt.

Lighthizer played a key role, for example, in strong-arming Japan into limiting auto exports in the 1980s. That move eventually led Japanese automakers to open plants in the United States, thereby creating US jobs, instead of shipping all its cars from Japan.

Later in private practice - he became a senior partner in internatio­nal trade at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom - Lighthizer represente­d US steel companies that complained that China and other countries were dumping underprice­d steel on the US market.

In 2010 testimony to US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, he lambasted US trade officials as too passive in the face of China’s economic rise. When it negotiated China’s 2001 entry into the World Trade Organizati­on - which sets trade rules and mediates disputes - Washington naively assumed that China was “merely a more exotic version of Canada” and would learn to live within WTO rules and open its market to American exports, Lighthizer argued.

Instead, he contended, China limited foreign competitio­n, manipulate­d its currency and subsidized its exporters to give them a price advantage. The notion that having China in the WTO would benefit Americans, Lighthizer concluded, “was simply wrong. Our trade deficit with China has exploded, millions of US manufactur­ing jobs have been lost. ”Trump campaigned on a promise to renegotiat­e or withdraw from agreements that he says failed American workers. But Dean Pinkert, formerly of the US Internatio­nal Trade Commission, says he thinks Lighthizer will seek better ways to use existing agreements before tearing them up. In his 2010 testimony, Lighthizer had said the US should more aggressive­ly scour WTO rules for new ways to bring cases against China - for manipulati­ng its currency, say.

Alan Wolff, a deputy US trade representa­tive in the Carter administra­tion, says China and other US trading partners should brace themselves. Under Lighthizer, Wolff says, “trade policy is going to get a lot more muscular.” —AP

Auto exports

 ?? —AP ?? NEW YORK: Bonobos manager Stephen Lusardi arranges clothing at the brand’s Guideshop, in New York’s Financial District. The US government issued the March jobs report on Friday.
—AP NEW YORK: Bonobos manager Stephen Lusardi arranges clothing at the brand’s Guideshop, in New York’s Financial District. The US government issued the March jobs report on Friday.
 ?? —AP ?? WASHINGTON: In this March 14, 2017 file photo, United States Trade Representa­tive-nominee Robert Lighthizer (foreground) looks at documents during his confirmati­on hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.
—AP WASHINGTON: In this March 14, 2017 file photo, United States Trade Representa­tive-nominee Robert Lighthizer (foreground) looks at documents during his confirmati­on hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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