The Pak Banker

Trump's one-way economy

- Jim O'Neill

Nowadays, when people ask me how I am, I answer, jokingly, that I'm doing great, so long as I ignore Donald Trump's presidency in the United States, Brexit, the crisis of the United Kingdom's major political parties, and the performanc­e of Manchester United.

But recently, the litany of unfortunat­e circumstan­ces has gotten so long that the joke is hard to pull off. One now must also list the political crisis in Hong Kong, a burgeoning diplomatic and economic dispute between Japan and South Korea, the Indian government's revocation of Jammu and Kashmir's autonomy - and India-Pakistan tensions more generally - and growing turmoil within South Africa's ruling African National Congress. Making matters worse, this has been a particular­ly rough summer in terms of the weather: heat waves across Europe and the US have served as a forceful reminder of the growing effects of climate change on our everyday lives. Add to all this other persistent sources of global uncertaint­y - from the Middle East and Russia under President Vladimir Putin to social-media disruption­s and antimicrob­ial resistance - and you have a recipe for despair.

If these were normal times, recent global developmen­ts would be showing up as sharply ris

ing risk premia, especially given that global growth has slowed substantia­lly over the course of 2019.

But these are not normal times, owing primarily to the current state of monetary policymaki­ng. Here, one must wonder if Trump has been escalating his threats of additional tariffs against China as a way to pressure the US Federal Reserve to reduce interest rates. After all, his recent Twitter tantrum on this issue came shortly after the Fed's decision to cut its policy rate by 25 basis points. In Trump's view - and in the view of the markets - that cut apparently wasn't large enough.

I sometimes wonder if Trump isn't like a James Bond villain, pursuing a secret, unnecessar­ily convoluted master plan for world domination. There certainly isn't any evident logic behind most of what he does. To be sure, when it comes to foreign policy, his populist posturing may be intended to goad other leaders around the world into similar behavior. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's moves in Kashmir, as well as the Japanese and South Korean government­s' tactics toward each other, seem to come straight from the Trump playbook. Politician­s around the world are no doubt telling themselves that if such behavior is acceptable for the US leader, it is appropriat­e for them, too.

The political logic of Trump's domestic strategy, however, is harder to explain. Much of it is about shoring up his voter base for the 2020 presidenti­al election.

But to win a second term, he will need to peel off more voters at the margins, and it is not clear that his current approach to domestic policy will win over those who do not already support him. As always with an incumbent, much will depend on the economy. Though the US unemployme­nt rate remains very low, the growth cycle has slowed and is now increasing­ly vulnerable. Worse, the US economy seems to have developed a one-way relationsh­ip with broader financial conditions, by which I mean short-term interest rates, bond yields, stock prices, the value of the dollar, and home prices.

The US economy would suffer if these financial conditions grew tighter, but it would barely benefit if they were to loosen.It is not clear that Trump and his advisers follow these financial conditions particular­ly closely. They seem desperate for a dramatic easing, yet Trump's threat of additional tariffs on Chinese imports has rattled global markets - including the shares of many US multinatio­nals - and led to tighter financial conditions in the US, owing to the rising value of the dollar. To offset that effect, both short- and long-term US interest rates would need to fall significan­tly. And, to be sure, there are some days when financial conditions do loosen, because the prospect of new tariffs, and thus higher consumer prices, leads investors to pour into bonds, thereby offsetting the tightening effects of a rising dollar and weak equities.

 ??  ?? One now must also list the political crisis in Hong Kong, a burgeoning diplomatic and economic dispute between Japan and South Korea, the Indian government's revocation of Jammu and
Kashmir's autonomy - and IndiaPakis­tan tensions more generally - and growing turmoil within South Africa's
ruling African National Congress.
One now must also list the political crisis in Hong Kong, a burgeoning diplomatic and economic dispute between Japan and South Korea, the Indian government's revocation of Jammu and Kashmir's autonomy - and IndiaPakis­tan tensions more generally - and growing turmoil within South Africa's ruling African National Congress.

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