Baltimore Sun

Russia’s invasion ends an era of globalizat­ion

Stark changes to the world’s economy are expected to happen

- By Paul Wiseman

For decades, the free flow of trade across much of the world allowed the richest nations to enjoy easy access to low-priced goods and supplies. It meant solid economies and stable markets.

And for households and businesses, especially in the United States and Europe, it meant an entire generation of ultralow inflation.

Now, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has delivered a devastatin­g blow to that system. Prices, which had already been rising, have shot up further. Supply chains, already disrupted by the swift recovery from the pandemic recession, face renewed pressure.

The widening rupture between the world’s democracie­s and its autocracie­s has further darkened the global picture.

The new New World Order leaves multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in a tricky spot: They’re straining to keep costs low and profits high while halting ties with Russia and facing pressure from consumers troubled by Russian aggression and Chinese human rights abuses.

Larry Fink, CEO of the investment management giant BlackRock, wrote last week in an annual letter to shareholde­rs that Russia’s invasion “upended the world order that had been in place since the end of the Cold War” and “put an end to the globalizat­ion we have experience­d

over the last three decades.”

“A large-scale reorientat­ion of supply chains,” Fink warned, “will inherently be inflationa­ry.”

Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, wrote in Foreign Affairs that “it now seems likely that the world economy really will split into blocs — one oriented around China and one around the United States.”

Though the rift has been years in the making, Russia’s war against Ukraine may have completed it. It likely concludes an era in which countries with clashing political systems — democracie­s and authoritar­ian states alike — could trade and mutually benefit. With Russian missiles killing Ukrainian civilians, it seems almost quaint to recall that unfriendly nations could take their disputes to the World Trade Organizati­on

and expect a peaceful resolution.

“It is hard to imagine Americans or Europeans in the same room as Russian delegates, pretending that one WTO member didn’t just invade another,” Rufus Yerxa and Wendy Cutler, both former U.S. trade negotiator­s, wrote in The National Interest.

Three decades ago, as the Cold War ended, globalizat­ion looked promising. The Soviet Union had collapsed. Communist China emerged from isolation and traded with the world. China gained entry to the WTO in 2001. Russia followed in 2012.

Trade flows accelerate­d. Multinatio­nal companies moved production to China to access low-wage labor. They further cut costs by using a “just-in-time” strategy to acquire materials only as needed to fill orders. Profits swelled.

A flood of Chinese imports

gave American consumers access to inexpensiv­e toys, clothes and electronic­s. U.S. policymake­rs dared to hope that freer trade would nudge Beijing and other authoritar­ian regimes toward political openness, too.

But strains emerged. Europe became reliant on energy from Vladimir Putin’s Russia. In 2011, an earthquake and tsunami damaged auto parts plants in Japan. A resulting parts shortages idled factories in the United States, a reminder that supply chains that spanned the Pacific risked disruption­s.

Then COVID-19 outbreaks closed Chinese factories and ports, snarling supply chains, causing shipping delays and higher prices and forcing U.S. companies to consider bringing production close to home.

The geopolitic­s got nastier. American manufactur­ers accused China of foul play.

They asserted — and many global analysts agreed — that Beijing manipulate­d its currency to make its exports less expensive and U.S. imports costlier, illicitly subsidized its own industries and restricted Western companies’ access to China’s market. The United States posted gaping trade deficits with China. Many U.S. factories succumbed to the competitio­n.

Riding a backlash against globalizat­ion to the presidency, President Donald Trump launched a trade war with Beijing. Direct investment between the two sides tumbled.

Now, Russia’s war is accelerati­ng the economic breakup between democracie­s and autocracie­s. Putin’s aggression spurred Western sanctions against the Russian economy and financial system. China, alone among major nations as a Russia ally, has sought to strike a balance. It has criticized the Western response to the war but done nothing that would violate the Western sanctions.

Some companies have responded to Moscow’s status as an economic pariah by leaving Russia.

BP and Shell abandoned investment­s. McDonald’s and Starbucks stopped serving customers. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has criticized Nestle, Unilever, Johnson & Johnson, Samsung and LG, among others, for continuing to operate in Russia.

“If you’re a (Western) business and you’re looking toward the future in terms of building new plants, sourcing new products, expanding business lines, you’re going to be more prone to look toward countries and companies with similar values and norms,” said Cutler, now vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

The emerging economic divide suggests a throwback to the Cold War, when the West and the Soviet bloc largely operated in separate economic spheres.

But back then, China was an economic backwater. This time, it’s the world’s top exporter and second-biggest economy.

Amid rising tensions between Beijing and Washington, Americans maintain a ravenous appetite for low-cost Chinese products. China last year exported nearly $507 billion of goods to the United States, the second-highest figure on record and far more than any other country.

The West’s retaliatio­n against Russian aggression, though justified, will “have negative economic consequenc­es that will go far beyond Russia’s financial collapse, that will persist, and that are not pretty,” Posen warned in Foreign Affairs.

A shift away from China eventually could move more production back to the United States and help restore some manufactur­ing jobs. Still, Christophe­r Rupkey, chief economist at the research firm FWDBONDS, foresees at least “one gigantic stumbling block” to that idea: A labor shortage.

“There is no one to work the factories to produce the goods here on American soil,” Rupkey wrote in a research report.

 ?? ?? People clear debris from destroyed houses Wednesday in Boromlya, Ukraine, near Kharkiv. CHRIS MCGRATH/GETTY
People clear debris from destroyed houses Wednesday in Boromlya, Ukraine, near Kharkiv. CHRIS MCGRATH/GETTY

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