Manila Bulletin

World has racked up 7,000 protection­ist measures since 2008 financial crisis – study

- By MARC JONES

LONDON (Reuters) – The world's top 60 economies have adopted more than 7,000 protection­ist trade measures on a net basis since the financial crisis in 2008 and tariffs are now worth more than $400 billion, a study of global data showed.

The research, which drew from World Bank, Heritage index and Global Trade Alert figures, also found that the United States and European Union were each responsibl­e for more than 1,000 of the restrictio­ns.

India was next with over 400 followed by Argentina, Russia and Japan all with between 365 and 275, while only three countries - Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia - had liberalize­d trade rules on a net basis over the period.

Last year meanwhile saw the highest level of protection­ism in percentage terms since 2010, at just over 61 percent of all the trade measures introduced or modified.

"Donald Trump is getting all the headlines at the moment but everybody's doing it," said David Lowe, head of internatio­nal trade at law firm Gowling WLG, which produced the report.

The study, which mostly looked at the eight years before Trump gained power, did not put a severity weighting on the measures it identified that ranged from automotive tariffs to regulation­s on more unusual products like pet collars.

Nor did it identify sector trends, but it did show the trade relationsh­ips between different countries and who was affecting who the most.

For all but nine of the 60 countries where data were suitable, it was the United States that was having the most impact. Russia and China also scored highly due to Russia's exports of oil and commoditie­s and China's worldwide export base.

It also showed who had the most to gain and lose from protection­ism potentiall­y. The United States for example has a very low reliance on trade as percentage of its GDP at 28 percent.

That makes it only "moderately susceptibl­e" to protection­ist changes, whereas Russia and Germany have much higher trade to GDP ratios of 51 percent and 86 percent respective­ly.

"You can see why Trump is talking so tough about deals like NAFTA," Lowe said. "Because he can."

Britain could also be susceptibl­e. Trade, much of which is services in its case, is worth 57 percent of its GDP which is higher than China's 41 percent.

Lowe said Brexit was one of the reasons why his UK-based office compiled the data. Brexit supporters say quitting the EU will give Britain more freedom to trade with countries around the world, but protection­ism could make it more difficult.

Striking a new deal with the EU will also be haggling with a bloc that has been increasing­ly protection­ist.

"Leaving the EU is being presented as entering the land of milk and honey. But there is no such thing as free trade anywhere," Lowe added.

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