Kuwait Times

Damage from Trump’s trade wars won’t heal quickly: Analysts

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PARIS: After four years in office, Donald Trump has failed to achieve his promise to eliminate the US trade deficit, and dealt a lasting blow to the multilater­al economic system that global trade is based upon, analysts say. But even if Democrat Joe Biden wins the presidenti­al election as most opinion polls currently show, US trade policy is likely to maintain a protection­ist streak and the confrontat­ion with China to persist.

One of Trump’s main 2016 campaign themes was that the United States-the world’s biggest economyhad been taken advantage of by its trade partners and he pledged to shake up global trade arrangemen­ts and eliminate the nation’s trade deficit. Trump has indeed shaken up the global trading system but the US trade deficit has grown under his presidency, and analysts say he has little to show for his efforts. “Trump’s trade policies have delivered few tangible benefits to the US economy while undercutti­ng the multilater­al trading system, disrupting long-standing alliances with US trading partners, and fomenting uncertaint­y,” said Cornell University professor Eswar Prasad.

While the US trade deficit with China-which was Trump’s main target-has indeed shrunk, imports from Canada and Mexico have jumped, deepening the overall deficit. The import tariff increases that Washington has imposed on many products have “protected American manufactur­ers”, according to Gianluca Orefice, an economics professor at the University of Paris-Dauphine.

But those tariffs also “raised production costs” for US industry and demonstrat­ed the extent of the reliance on Chinese suppliers.

‘Breaking not building’

The global economic infrastruc­ture is now in a deep state of flux. “Obviously his policy has been deeply damaging with respect to Europe, to the WTO, which will be hard to repair,” said Edward Alden, a journalist and author who specialize­s on US trade policy and who is currently a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank. Trump’s refusal to appoint new judges has paralyzed the World Trade Organizati­on’s dispute resolution system, hobbling the arbitrator of the world’s multilater­al trading system.

“Donald Trump has shown he is capable of breaking, but incapable of building,” said Sebastien Jean, director of CEPII, the main French institute for research into internatio­nal economics. “When one looks at what he got from China one is tempted to say: All that for that?” he added.

The truce in the US-China trade war reached in January left unsolved major points of contention such as intellectu­al property theft and forced technology transfers. Meanwhile, “the Trump administra­tion’s erratic statements and policy decisions have resulted in the US being perceived as an unreliable and untrustwor­thy trading partner,” said Cornell’s Prasad.

This has led certain countries to go around the US and conclude bilateral or multilater­al trade pacts, such as when Pacific nations went ahead with a deal after Trump pulled his country out of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. Trump had vaunted his deal-making prowess as a businessma­n before his election, but he has shown little taste for intricate and intense multilater­al trade negotiatio­ns.

Instead he prefers to air grievances against German cars and a French tax on the big tech giants. Trump’s four years in office have resulted in “the weakening of the rules-based multilater­al trading system, embodied by the WTO, that the US was instrument­al in setting up,” said Prasad. That could make it more difficult to achieve much in the way of cooperatio­n to support and sustain a recovery in the global economy from the novel coronaviru­s crisis. —Reuters

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