Oman Daily Observer

Trump’s economy faces a reckoning

- DOUGLAS GILLISON BUCKLE UP

America’s economy is showing signs of sagging under the weight of President Donald Trump’s escalating trade war with China, which is whipsawing industries and financial markets. Punitive tariffs have stung major trading partners just as those economies were losing vigour — sapping demand for US goods and services and helping to send American manufactur­ing into recession.

Meanwhile, the uncertaint­y this has created has rocked US businesses, raising concerns about their supply chains and markets, causing new investment to flatline and employers to become cautious.

Caught in the middle, the Federal Reserve finds itself buffeted by the economic currents and battered by the president’s ceaseless attacks.

Fed Chief Jerome Powell struggled to explain this week why the looming dangers Trump has helped create justify cutting interest rates this week despite historical­ly low unemployme­nt, and continuing, if slowing, growth and job creation.

Trump on Thursday announced tariffs starting September 1 on another $300 billion in Chinese goods, more than doubling the volume subject to punitive US duties. The latest action provoked threats of more retaliatio­n by Beijing.

Gregory Daco, Chief US Economist at Oxford Economics, told AFP the hit from Trump’s year of trade skirmishes came just as the limited boost from the massive tax cuts in late 2017 began to fade out of the

economy. “It’s come off its sugar high to a place where it’s more susceptibl­e,” he said.

Trade wars and slower growth are not a good combinatio­n and pose a risk to the world economy, but, “Encouragin­gly, US households are still spending,” Daco said. “We’re not in a recession by any means.”

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has warned the tariffs imposed in the Uschina trade war — including the latest tranche — could shave a half percentage point off the world economy by next year, an amount larger than the entire South African economy.

The new tariffs alone could cost individual American households an extra $200 each next year, according to Oxford Economics.

Meanwhile, there were sobering aspects to US economic data this week.

US merchandis­e goods exports in 2019 are on track to fall for the first time in three years, according to government data published on Friday. And the American surplus in services — like software royalties and intellectu­al property licensing — fell in June to its lowest level since 2016.

And with the global economy slowing, foreign buyers took fewer US vacations in June and bought fewer gems and jewellery, fewer passenger cars, medication­s, telecommun­ications equipment and computer accessorie­s.

Manufactur­ing activity is contractin­g in China, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Britain and Europe as global trade volumes have fallen.

And a survey of the US manufactur­ing sector showed the fourth consecutiv­e monthly decline in July, increasing worries about domestic industries.

But US wages continue to rise, which should support consumer spending, which dominates the American economy and the key source of growth.

A broad measure of unemployme­nt, including people working part-time because they cannot find a full-time gig, fell to its lowest level in nearly 19 years.

But overall job growth, while still respectabl­e, has slowed sharply since 2018, with the average number of new jobs created in the last three months now just over half the pace seen last year.

Punitive tariffs have stung major trading partners just as those economies were losing vigour — sapping demand for US goods and services and helping to send American manufactur­ing into recession

 ?? — Reuters ?? Workers stack empty shipping containers for storage at Wando Welch Terminal operated by the South Carolina Ports Authority in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, US.
— Reuters Workers stack empty shipping containers for storage at Wando Welch Terminal operated by the South Carolina Ports Authority in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, US.

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