The Borneo Post

US Treasury chief moves to calm lawmakers’ trade jitters

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WASHINGTON: US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin worked to ease lawmakers’ worries about President Donald Trump’s expanding trade offensive.

Mnuchin’s appearance before a key Congressio­nal committee came a day after the US Senate overwhelmi­ngly voted to adopt a symbolic rebuke of the White House, endorsing legal limits on the president’s trade powers.

The Senat e vot e was nonbinding, but underscore­d the daylight separating Trump and members of his own Republican party, who have so far shrunk from actively blocking his trade policies.

With scores of billions of dol lars in US imports and exports now subject to punitive import duties, higher industrial and consumer prices are beginning to feed into inflation, alarming business leaders.

Economists have repeatedly warned that the growing trade war will depress investment and economic growth.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has also warned against the rising tide of protection­ism and the potential to damage the global recovery. The IMF is due to release updated global growth projection­s on Monday.

Meanwhile, in an interview wi th NPR Ma rke t pl ac e Thursday, Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell said he was “hearing a rising level of concern about the effects of changes in trade policy.”

“Since War II we’ve had this trading system develop, and consistent­ly tariffs have come down and trade has grown. And I think that’s served the global economy, and particular­ly the United States economy, very well,” he said.

“I think this process that is going on now is a new one. It’s very difficult to predict how it turns out and we’ll just have to see.”

But Mnuchin defended Trump’s policies before the House Financial Services Committee, while lawmakers repeatedly pleaded for US pr o duc t s, worke rs and industries vulnerable to tariffs, including Georgia pecans, Kentucky bourbon, Michigan and South Carol ina autos, Missouri soy growers and nail manufactur­ers.

The committee chairman, outgoing Texas Republican Jeb Hensarl ing, said the tariffs jeopardize­d US energy independen­ce by raising prices for oil f ield equipment . He denounced Trump’s threats to use national security as a justi f ication for even more tari f fs on the hundreds of billions of dollars in annual auto imports.

“The 11-year- old Honda Accord I drove to work today simply does not threaten national security, nor does any other imported vehicle,” Hensarling said, urging the White House to focus on China rather than confrontin­g traditiona­l allies like Canada and Europe.

But Mnuchin said in annual testimony on the state of the internatio­nal financial system that the president’s policies were likely to succeed for all concerned.

“I think that the end game is we’re focused on having free and fair trade for American companies,” Mnuchin said. “I’m cautiously optimistic but I think we’re going to end up in a good place.”

He also said he was paying close attention to vulnerable sectors such as soy beans.

“We have not yet seen any negative impact although... we are monitoring the impact on uncertaint­y in investment.”

Mnuchin said Trump had urged famed Wiscons in motorcycle maker Harley Davidson not to of fshore a dd i t i on a l pr o duc t i on in response to retal iatory European tariffs.

But he suggested the company had seized on Trump’s tariff policies last month to deflect negative scrutiny from its offshoring plans.

The company announced last month plans to shift some production overseas due to the 31 percent European tariffs on motorcycle­s imposed in retaliatio­n for Trump’s steep dut ies on aluminium and steel.

“My sense is that Harley Davidson had previously planned on moving some of this manufactur­ing,” he said.

Mnuchin also said Washington continued to urge US allies to cut oil imports from Iran.

Over the objections of allies, Trump in May pulled the United States from a joint deal on Iran’s nuclear program, reinstatin­g US sanctions and effectivel­y barring many multinatio­nal firms from doing business in that country.

New US sanctions on Iranian oil exports are set to take effect in November although US officials have floated the possibilit­y of offering some waivers.

“I think we expect that the Iranian oil shipments wi l l decrease significan­tly,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? US Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin testifies to the House Financial Services hearing on state of the internatio­nal financial system on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 12. — Reuters photo
US Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin testifies to the House Financial Services hearing on state of the internatio­nal financial system on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 12. — Reuters photo

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