Manawatu Standard

Team Trump scolds US trade rivals

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SWITZERLAN­D: Team Trump stormed the fortress of the global elites on their first day in Davos, defiantly accusing America’s foes of blinding the world with free trade humbug and abusing the internatio­nal trade system.

The United States economic cabinet told the World Economic Forum summit yesterday that America had long been the victim of daily guerrilla warfare by trade hypocrites and was at last drawing its own sword in response, no longer willing to tolerate what it deemed to be systematic gouging of the open US market.

‘‘Trade wars are fought every single day: every single day there are always parties violating the rules and trying to take unfair advantage of things,’’ said Wilbur Ross, the US Commerce Secretary. ‘‘So a trade war has been in place for quite a little while. The difference is, US troops are now coming to the ramparts.’’

Ross denied that US President Donald Trump was retreating into commercial isolation, insisting that a blizzard of 84 separate trade measures, probes and sanctions over the last year were a response to mercantili­st abuses that had been tolerated for far too long.

‘‘What has provoked a lot of the trade actions is inappropri­ate behaviour on the part of our trading counter-parties. Many countries are good at the rhetoric of free trade but actually practise extreme protection­ism, and that is a problem the president is quite determined to deal with,’’ he said.

Ross said the US was invariably accused of protection­ism whenever it tried to defend itself, but this was how other countries masked their own self-interest.

The White House is deeply irritated over the way foreign leaders – Chinese President Xi Jinping, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and some of Europe’s political class – pose as the defenders of free markets at the forum, when in reality they game the system in subtle ways with covert barriers, tax distortion­s or currency manipulati­on.

Trump’s team aims to turn the tables by pointing fingers and going on the rhetorical offensive. Yet it is an uphill task, after the US was outflanked this week when 11 countries revived the Transpacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP) without the Americans.

Steven Mnuchin, the US Treasury Secretary, sought to play down the embarrassm­ent, insisting that America was ‘‘open for business’’ and eager to forge bilateral deals on an equal footing. ‘‘We absolutely believe in free and fair trade,’’ he said.

Mnuchin came close to inviting a further speculativ­e attack on the US dollar.

‘‘The dollar is one of the most liquid markets. Where it is in the short term is not a concern at all. Obviously, a weaker dollar is good for us as it relates to trade and opportunit­ies,’’ he said.

The comments sent the dollar index into a fresh tailspin, tumbling to a three-year low of 89.67 and breaking through the psychologi­cal barrier of 90. It touched US$1.2355 against the euro.

Ross left little doubt that the coming weeks will be a stormy time for US trade policy, with talks over the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) in danger of breaking down and a string of disputes with China coming to a head.

Washington kicked off this week with tariffs on solar panels and washing machines, to the fury of China and South Korea. While acknowledg­ing that China and other states could retaliate, Ross advised them to think twice.

‘‘You should also be aware to the degree that there is retaliatio­n, there is the question of what does the US in turn do,’’ he said.

All sides suffer in a trade war, but the lesson of the 1930s is that those countries running a structural trade surplus ultimately suffer more. – Telegraph Group

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? United States Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says America is now joining the trade war that ‘‘has been in place for quite a little while’’, and which has hurt the US economy.
PHOTO: AP United States Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says America is now joining the trade war that ‘‘has been in place for quite a little while’’, and which has hurt the US economy.

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