The Borneo Post

Trump trade moves chilling, could hurt US businesses

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump’s first moves on trade have cast a pall over US trade relations and could hurt US businesses, trade experts say.

It’s a sign of a brake on global integratio­n. Alejandro Werner, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund official

Trump has begun his term by pulling out of one major agreement, vowing to renegotiat­e or exit another, and threatenin­g to impose border taxes on imports – a clear shift away from decades of policy putting the United States at the forefront of the global push for free trade.

A strident critic of existing US free trade agreements throughout his campaign, Trump’s first order of business Monday was to sign an executive order officially withdrawin­g from the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

The move was the fulfillmen­t of a campaign promise – one that was easy to do because the 2015 agreement had never been implemente­d, but which nonetheles­s sent a clear signal the United States is backing away from hard-fought trade pacts.

“It’s a sign of a brake on global integratio­n,” said Internatio­nal Monetary Fund official Alejandro Werner, who heads the Western Hemisphere Department.

Jake Colvin, vice president of the National Foreign Trade Council, a pro- trade business group, said US leadership on trade issues remains key.

“It is critical that the United States not cede leadership on the global economy to countries like China,” he told AFP.

“It’ s important to have a muscular trade policy, but we need to make sure we’re playing offense as well as defense and continue to open up foreign markets for American business and workers.”

He said the NFTC will engage with the new administra­tion to point out the good things the TPP would have accomplish­ed.

The TPP withdrawal followed shortly on Trump’s threat in a meeting with corporate CEOs at the White House early Monday to impose “a substantia­l border tax” on products coming into the US market, to encourage firms to move manufactur­ing into the country.

“Now, some people would say that’s not free trade, but we don’t have free trade now,” since countries like China and others make it “very, very hard” to sell US products there, he said. “In some cases it’s impossible.”

“What we want is fair trade, fair trade. We’re going to treat countries fairly, but they have to treat us fairly.”

But trade experts caution that such moves risk retaliatio­n and in an extreme event a trade war.

“This is going to be disruptive. It’s not a surprise. We elected a disruptive guy as president,” said Scott Miller, an internatio­nal business expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

Discrimina­tory tariffs on particular countries – like those Trump threatened to impose on Mexico and China during the campaign – are “just chaos,” said Barry Bosworth, chair of internatio­nal economics at the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington think tank.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? US President Donald Trump holds up an executive order withdrawin­g the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p after signing it in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, January 23. Trump the decree Monday that effectivel­y ends US...
— AFP photo US President Donald Trump holds up an executive order withdrawin­g the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p after signing it in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, January 23. Trump the decree Monday that effectivel­y ends US...

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