Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

BEST OF THREE SCENARIOS FOR WORLD TRADE

- BY RAZEEN SALLY

Internatio­nal trade is in trouble after the global financial crisis and, with the new Trump administra­tion, the world faces a protection­ist onslaught. As a result, there are three ways that internatio­nal trade can go from here — one considerab­ly ‘more likely’ than the other two.

Let’s begin with the state of play. Three features stand out: a global trade slowdown, creeping protection­ism and the failure of the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p (TPP).

First, global trade growth — what is dubbed ‘peak trade’ — has slowed down markedly. Internatio­nal trade grew twice as fast as world output in the quarter-century before the global financial crisis (GFC). It slumped during the crisis and then picked up again, but since 2012, it has barely kept pace with the world gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Trade revived along with global economic growth in the first quarter of 2017. But it is too early to tell if this is a new trend or just a blip on the screen.

Second, protection­ism has increased since the GFC. It has not escalated to 1930s’ heights, nor has it reversed the existing globalisat­ion. Rather, postgfc protection­ism has been ‘creeping’ up, mostly through anti-dumping duties and insidious non-tariff barriers such as subsidies, onerous standards requiremen­ts and public procuremen­t restrictio­ns.

Third, President Trump has announced the US’ withdrawal from the TPP. This is highly unfortunat­e for two reasons. First, the TPP was the most ambitious trade deal in 20 years, with hard rules for freer trade and foreign investment. Second, it was a geopolitic­al signal of US reengageme­nt in Asia — the vaunted US ‘pivot’. Now these economic gains are foregone. And it is a dangerous signal of US disengagem­ent from Asia.

This leaves the field open for China to assume trade leadership in Asia. It is already doing so on infrastruc­ture. China is the leading power in the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), which brings together the ASEAN countries plus six others. But the RCEP is shaping up to be a typically ‘trade-lite’ intra-asian trade agreement. While it will eventually remove most import tariffs, it will likely do little to tackle the non-tariff and regulatory barriers that are by far the biggest obstacles to trade and foreign investment in Asia.

The first ‘more likely’ scenario is of trade winds blowing in a more protection­ist direction, starting in the United States. In addition to the US withdrawal from the TPP, President Trump wants to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), has threatened high tariffs against China and against US companies that relocate production abroad and says he will ignore the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO). The US’ other major trade initiative, a free trade agreement with the European Union (EU), is either stalled or dead. Trump’s senior trade policy appointees are fellow economic nationalis­ts. All are obsessed with trade deficits, China-bashing and industrial policy to revive United States manufactur­ing.

New US protection­ism could begin with a spike in antidumpin­g and countervai­ling duties, aimed first at China. Import taxes, euphemisti­cally called a ‘border tax adjustment’, could be part of a US taxreform package. Other measures might follow that would cause a flood of WTO disputes. And other countries would follow the US protection­ist lead, starting with the EU and China.

If this happened, it would only accelerate trends since the GFC. Creeping protection­ism would no longer be creeping: it would accelerate, affecting bigger chunks of internatio­nal trade and disrupting global value chains. Peak trade would be worse: there would be a bigger world trade slowdown. That would drive world GDP growth even lower, in the West and the rest.

But there are powerful countervai­ling forces. The most potent is the existing globalisat­ion through global value chains. United States companies are woven thickly into them and they will likely lobby against Trumpian protection­ism. United States producers and consumers will suffer from US protection­ism and other countries’ retaliatio­n. The Congressio­nal Republican leadership, some cabinet officers and senior White House staff, as well as Republican and Democrat governors in the states, could restrain the economicna­tionalist impulses of Trump and his senior trade appointees.

The second more pessimisti­c scenario is a full-blown trade war: unrestrain­ed US protection­ism, escalating tit-fortat retaliatio­n by the EU, China and others, perhaps the break-up of the NAFTA and the severe disruption of global value chains. This would be a lurch back to 1930s-style protection­ism, de-globalisat­ion and depression. But this is unlikely.

A more optimistic scenario would be of others taking up the baton of open-market trade leadership. The EU might be up for it. And China. Internatio­nal cooperatio­n would be more equally shared. And the WTO revived. But this is also doubtful. Both the EU and China have ever bigger internal weaknesses that limit their ability to lead abroad. Absent the United States, prospects for internatio­nal trade cooperatio­n are bleak, not least in the WTO.

Outward-looking US leadership is still essential for internatio­nal trade. Without it, the world economy would be worse allround — more unstable and less open. That is true for other areas of global economic policy and for global security. The United States, contrary to gathering convention­al wisdom, is still the ‘indispensa­ble nation’. (Courtesy East Asia Forum) (Razeen Sally is Associate Professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore)

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