The Sentinel-Record

Trump should use G-20 summit find a trade victory

- Copyright 2018, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — If President Trump is the dealmaker he claims to be, he should use the upcoming G-20 summit in Buenos Aires to declare a win in his trade war with China — before his bombast does any more damage to the global economy.

Trade is Trump’s signature issue. But more than a year after he began threatenin­g tariffs on major trading partners, he has relatively little to show for it. The improvemen­ts in NAFTA are modest, at best. The

U.S. economy hasn’t suffered significan­tly, but global growth is beginning to slow, and trade jitters are one reason.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund warned last month that it was lowering its global growth projection­s by 0.2 percentage points for 2018 and 2019, in part because of “rising trade barriers.” The IMF explained: “Escalating trade tensions and the potential shift away from a multilater­al, rules-based trading system are key threats to the global outlook. … An increase in trade barriers would disrupt global supply chains … and slow the spread of new technologi­es, ultimately lowering global productivi­ty and welfare.”

The Trump administra­tion’s trade strategy has been a gradual march toward the cliff, as summarized in a timeline prepared by the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics. First came the Oct. 31, 2017, recommenda­tions for tariffs on washing machines and solar panels, which were imposed in January 2018 on about $10 billion in imports of these products — the first such tariff requests since 2001 and a small but telling warning shot.

The big guns were rolled out by the Commerce Department in its February 2018 recommenda­tion for tariffs on steel and aluminum under the rarely used “national-security” authority of Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. The tariffs were steep — 25 percent for steel and 10 percent for aluminum — and they heavily targeted allies. Some trading partners got exemptions, but the tariffs were reimposed on countries that Trump wanted to squeeze, such as Canada and Mexico.

Trump evidently imagined that Section 232 tariffs would force Mexico and Canada to capitulate in revising NAFTA. That didn’t happen. The new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement is a modest improvemen­t, with some better protection­s for workers. But one negotiator estimates that 85 percent of the improvemen­ts in the deal were lifted from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p — which Trump had scuttled when he first took office.

The downside of Trump’s trade isolationi­sm is illustrate­d by the fact that the TPP is going ahead without the United States. Seven countries have already endorsed the pact, and that number is likely to grow to 11 by the end of December, when the TPP takes effect. The pact will cut tariffs on agricultur­al and industrial products, ease foreign investment and protect intellectu­al property — all potential benefits for the U.S. that will be lost.

The main adversary in the trade war, of course, has been China. In July, Trump imposed 25 percent tariffs on $34 billion in products, and then in September added another $200 billion after threatenin­g tariffs on all Chinese products. What the administra­tion hadn’t considered carefully enough was the blowback of these tariffs for U.S. manufactur­ers that use Chinese products. A similar misunderst­anding about global supply chains undermined the campaigns against Mexico and Canada. To be blunt, this is a trade-focused administra­tion that doesn’t seem to understand how global trade really works in 2018.

“This is not a normal negotiatio­n with normal people,” commented a Canadian business leader who has watched Trump’s negotiator­s try to bully concession­s from Canada, with limited success.

U.S. businesses that are getting caught in the trade backfire are protesting more loudly. This week, nearly 40 organizati­ons representi­ng retailers, manufactur­ers and farmers sent U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthzer a letter demanding removal of the Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum still imposed on Mexico and Canada. The industry groups warned that they want to support a new USMCA pact, but only if it “benefits … our long-term ability to survive in a global economy.”

A potential showdown will come when Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet in Buenos Aires during the G-20 talks, which begin Nov. 30. Trump has pressured China with his usual threats and economic penalties. Now, if the North Korea nuclear negotiatio­ns and NAFTA are any guide, he will move toward a deal that makes limited changes to the status quo, but which he can tout as a victory.

Nearly two years on, Trump’s trade policies seem like a very big windup for a puny pitch. He could hold out for more — and go to full battle stations in the trade conflict — but that would be a mistake and especially harmful for Trump supporters in manufactur­ing.

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