Calgary Herald

White House admits economy was dragged by Trump’s trade tactics

- RICH MILLER

WASHINGTON The White House acknowledg­ed what many economists considered obvious through much of last year: U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade stance depressed economic growth and business investment.

“Uncertaint­y generated by trade negotiatio­ns dampened investment,” Trump chief economist Tomas Philipson told reporters in a briefing on the annual Economic Report of the President released on Thursday.

The admission contrasted with Trump’s repeated assertions that his tariff tactics hadn’t hurt the economy while swelling the government’s tax coffers.

Even so, the deleteriou­s effect of trade uncertaint­y got barely a mention in a 435-page economic report that frequently extolled the president’s programs and argued that they’ve led to a “great expansion” that is benefiting a broader swathe of Americans.

Philipson, who is acting chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, declined to say how much of an effect trade uncertaint­y has had.

He did though point to a Federal Reserve study that suggested it could reduce gross domestic product by about one per cent, at the same time adding he didn’t necessaril­y agree with that estimate.

The economy grew 2.3 per cent last year after expanding 2.9 per cent in 2018. “Uncertaint­y about trade policy is one often-cited culprit in the manufactur­ing slowdown,” Philipson and fellow CEA board member Tyler Goodspeed wrote in the economic report. “However, other reasons for the global manufactur­ing slowdown also preceded, or were contempora­neous with trade,” including a deleveragi­ng-led decelerati­on in China’s economy.

“These reasons make it difficult to isolate the effects of trade policy uncertaint­y, and possibly result in an upward bias of its effects on the global economy,” they added in the report.

Philipson told reporters the U.S. economy should benefit as uncertaint­y over Trump’s trade policies fades. Global growth will also be aided in the long run by a “more balanced, reciprocal” trading system, according to the report.

The U.S. and China in January signed a partial trade deal that left some of the thorniest issues between the two economic power houses unsettled. The Trump administra­tion is also in the midst of wide-ranging trade talks with the European Union.

Not surprising­ly, Philipson effectivel­y aligned himself with Trump in the president’s Twitter spat this week with his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, over who deserves credit for the record-long U.S. expansion.

After Obama proclaimed that his Us$800-billion plus stimulus package 11 years ago had paved the way for the upswing, Trump fired back, calling his predecesso­r’s comments a “con job.”

“Three years into the Trump administra­tion, the U.S. economy continues to outperform pre 2016 election expectatio­ns,” Philipson told reporters. “The economy is lowering inequality both in terms of income and wealth. That reverses the previous part of the expansion.”

In a novel analysis, the White House report argues that Trump’s deregulato­ry efforts will lift household incomes significan­tly by reducing how much Americans have to spend on such things as health care and access to the internet.

Philipson told reporters that he didn’t have a lot of concerns about the durability of the 10-1/2-yearold expansion. “We have laid the groundwork for minimizing the probabilit­y” of a recession, he said.

He also played down concerns about the potential impact of the coronaviru­s on the U.S. economy. “I don’t think the coronaviru­s is as big a threat as people make it out to be,” he said.

In a Fox Business television interview last week, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said the epidemic could lower U.S. GDP by 0.2 per cent or 0.3 per cent in the first quarter, though he added there was a “lot of uncertaint­y” surroundin­g that estimate.

 ?? TIM RUE/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump’s chief economist Tomas Philipson says uncertaint­y arising from trade conflicts hurt investment. At the same time, the U.S. economic report credited the president’s programs for boosting the economy. Above, a cargo ship nears a California port.
TIM RUE/BLOOMBERG FILES U.S. President Donald Trump’s chief economist Tomas Philipson says uncertaint­y arising from trade conflicts hurt investment. At the same time, the U.S. economic report credited the president’s programs for boosting the economy. Above, a cargo ship nears a California port.

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