Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Is G20 backing down on its fight against protection­ism?

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BY ADAM TRIGGS

Some worrying headlines have come out of the meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Germany over the weekend. The headlines warn that the G20 has been ‘steamrolle­d’ by the new Trump administra­tion into scrapping its decadelong tradition of stating its opposition to protection­ism in its communiqué­s.

But many of these reports are exaggerate­d. It is incorrect to say that the G20 has abandoned its commitment to resisting protection­ism. The meeting did show that the G20 will face serious challenges. It must resist the protection­ist push coming from the Trump administra­tion while finding a way forward on trade within a new and complex political environmen­t.

Media reports released after last weekend’s meeting have suggested that the G20 has broken a ‘decade-long’ tradition of pledging to resist protection­ism. Thankfully, this is not correct. Throughout Australia’s G20 host year in 2014, for example, finance ministers and central bank governors never made any commitment to fight protection­ism at any of their four meetings.

The reason for this is straightfo­rward. The G20 divides responsibi­lity for different policy areas between finance ministers and sherpas (the officials who advise leaders). Finance ministers don’t have responsibi­lity for trade. Sherpas do. This is why finance ministers did not commit to fighting protection­ism during Australia’s host year and why reports that the G20 has broken a decade-long tradition at this recent meeting are incorrect.

But while it may be too early to write off the G20’s commitment to resisting protection­ism, there is trouble on the horizon. Concerning reports are emerging that finance ministers in Germany tried to include this commitment in the communiqué but were prevented from doing so by the United States. It has been reported that China’s officials worked furiously behind the scenes to try to thwart the push from the United States for revised wording on trade. After the meeting, Germany’s finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble reportedly said ‘we have reached an impasse’ on trying to avoid protection­ism ‘because it meant different things’ to different countries.

If these reports are correct then there are plenty of reasons to be concerned. The question for the G20, though, is what should be done about it.

When reporting on this issue, many commentato­rs seem to forget that the G20 is a consensus forum. This means that it cannot act without the unanimous agreement of all 20 countries, such that each country has an effective veto. Arguments that the G20 should simply oppose the Trump administra­tion and push ahead on promoting free trade ignore this critical point. In short, nothing can happen on trade in the G20 without US endorsemen­t.

In light of this, the G20 needs to do two things. First, it needs to resist the outright protection­ist push coming from the Trump administra­tion. If reports are correct that the recent meeting in Germany was ‘19 against one’ then the G20 seems to be doing well. But this is just rhetoric. If Trump follows through on his commitment­s to enforce a border tax and taxes on US companies that move offshore, while continuing to retaliate against China’s allegedly undervalue­d currency, then G20 countries need to be ready to step up their concerted pressure on the United States to protect the global system.

But the G20 cannot settle with a stalemate either. It needs to find a way forward on trade within this new political environmen­t. The good news is that finance ministers did not simply choose to avoid mentioning trade. Instead, they came up with a compromise text that they are ‘working to strengthen the contributi­on of trade to our economies’. This gives G20 countries something to work with.

Given substantia­l disagreeme­nts between members, the G20 needs to focus its efforts on analysis and more effective political messaging. It should commission independen­t analysis on the cost of protection­ism and, conversely, how the benefits of trade are dispersed across different groups in the community. A recent study published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics found that, on average, the real income loss from closing off trade is 28 percent for the richest percentile of society but a much larger 63 percent for the poorest. On the basis of this study, populist politician­s who purport to attack free trade in defence of the poor are either ignorant or disingenuo­us.

Commission­ing in-depth analysis on the impacts of trade protection­ism is a practical way for the G20 to move forward on its trade agenda. It is also something which is difficult for the United States to oppose given the substantia­l concerns the Trump administra­tion has raised on the impacts of trade on US workers.

The awkward meeting between Trump and Merkel in Washington suggests much of the cooperatio­n between the US and Germany this year will fall to ministers and officials. Until the leaders meet in July, this means all eyes will be on the next meeting of finance ministers in April. (East Asia Forum) (Adam Triggs is a research scholar at the Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU. He was formerly a member of the Australian G20 Task Force)

IT IS INCORRECT TO SAY THAT THE G20 HAS ABANDONED ITS COMMITMENT TO RESISTING PROTECTION­ISM

 ??  ?? US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) shakes hands with Singapore’s National Developmen­t Minister Lawrence Wong during G20 meeting
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) shakes hands with Singapore’s National Developmen­t Minister Lawrence Wong during G20 meeting

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