The Borneo Post

BIS’s Carstens warns of economic risks of protection­ism

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JACKSON HOLE, Wyo: Agustin Carstens, general manager of the Bank of Internatio­nal Settlement­s, delivered a scathing critique of rising protection­ism, a not- sosubtle rebuke to US President Donald Trump’s use of tariffs and trade talks to wring concession­s from China, Mexico and many other countries.

Reversing globalisat­ion “could increase prices, raise unemployme­nt and crimp growth”, Carstens, the former head of Mexico’s central bank, told fellow former and current central bankers at the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank’s annual economic symposium here.

Higher tariffs could drive up US inflation and force the Fed to raise rates, driving up the dollar and hurting both US exporters and emerging market economies in the process, Carstens said

Protection­ism also threatens “to unsettle financial markets and put a drag on firms’ capital spending, as investors take fright and financial conditions tighten,” he said.

The BIS released a research paper at the same time as Carstens’ speech that estimated revoking the North American Free Trade Agreement, as Trump has threatened, would mean a loss to gross domestic product of US$ 37 billion in Canada, US$ 22 billion in Mexico, and US$ 40 billion in the US, with non-tariff trade barriers accounting for the lion’s share of the losses. Wages would also fall across North America, the research found.

Mexican and US negotiator­s have narrowed trade-pact difference­s in recent days, and Canada will join trade talks once those have been resolved, but the overall future of NAFTA remains unclear.

The US and China have also been wrangling over trade issues. US and Chinese officials ended two days of talks on Thursday with little progress as their trade war escalated with activation of another round of dueling tariffs on US$ 16 billion worth of each country’s goods.

Even as Fed chair Jerome Powell has signaled gradual rate hikes ahead, he and other policymake­rs have largely stepped gingerly around the effect of rising trade frictions on the US economy and monetary policy.

So far, they say, the impact of the tariffs themselves, and related currency gyrations in some countries including Turkey, are not slowing the US economy, and therefore do not require a response.

But, speaking at the final panel in the two- day meeting that examined market structures’ impact on inflation and other metrics that central bankers follow closely, Carstens warned that central bankers ignore trade skirmishes at their peril. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Carstens leaves after G20 finance ministers and central banks governors family photo during the IMF/World Bank spring meeting in Washington, US. Carstens delivered a scathing critique of rising protection­ism, a not-so-subtle rebuke to US President Trump’s use of tariffs and trade talks to wring concession­s from China, Mexico and many other countries. — Reuters photo
Carstens leaves after G20 finance ministers and central banks governors family photo during the IMF/World Bank spring meeting in Washington, US. Carstens delivered a scathing critique of rising protection­ism, a not-so-subtle rebuke to US President Trump’s use of tariffs and trade talks to wring concession­s from China, Mexico and many other countries. — Reuters photo

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