The Borneo Post

Trump trade policies puncturing America’s economic optimism

- — WPBloomber­g

PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s trade policies are taking some air out of the high-flying economic optimism that had prevailed among American companies and consumers since his 2016 election.

Confidence gauges spanning small businesses, factories and the public at large are coming off the boil as US tariffs on imported metals – along with threats and counter-threats over Chinese goods – roil the stock market and cast a cloud over what was otherwise a bright economic outlook.

The latest indication­s arrived last Thursday in the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelph­ia’s regional manufactur­ing survey and the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index.

While there’s no sign of a collapse, the widespread coolingoff in sentiment warrants monitoring. Consumer spending accounts for about 70 per cent of the economy, and manufactur­ing – around 12 per cent – has been posting strong gains that helped power three consecutiv­e quarters of US growth above or near a three per cent pace last year.

“Consumer and business confidence is still high – it’s just not quite as giddy as before,” said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James Financial in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Trump’s tariff policies “are just a bad idea” that amount to a tax on businesses and consumers, and more broadly, people “are coming to the realisatio­n that maybe growth will not be quite as strong as they thought,” Brown said.

Trade tensions were front and center as global policy makers met in Washington for spring meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank, with IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde cautioning against protection­ism.

“What is extra- ordinarily meaningful is the questionin­g of the overall system under which operators have been operating for decades,” she said last Thursday.

“It’s the confidence that risks being eroded.”

The Fed’s Beige Book report on last Wednesday underscore­d the risks. In the Dallas Fed region, for example, several contacts in manufactur­ing “noted that the newly enacted tariffs were creating a lot of uncertaint­y in their outlooks for activity and prices,” the report said.

Peter Navarro, Trump’s director of trade and manufactur­ing policy, said that “as improved deals are concluded, uncertaint­y over the negotiatio­ns will naturally subside.”

“Renegotiat­ing bad trade deals and successful­ly negotiatin­g new deals are already proving to be great for the businesses, consumers, and workers of America,” Navarro said in a statement, citing the renegotiat­ion of an accord with South Korea and commitment­s for US factory investment in the wake of tariffs on imported items.

Confidence had soared in the past year and coming into 2018 for a number of reasons: Trump’s election, tax cuts and reduced regulation­s, to name a few. Optimism remains elevated amid a solid job market, rising corporate earnings, and easy financial conditions.

The pace of expansion in the first quarter probably eased, in part due to a seasonal quirk in the data, but will probably bounce back in the April- June period, according to economists.

Yet the tariff policies and threats – stemming from Trump’s pledges to improve the lot of US workers and reduce the trade deficit – are showing there’s a limit to the cheer, especially as business costs rise.

The Philadelph­ia Fed’s index of business activity six months from now dropped 7.2 points to 40.7 in April, the lowest level since July.

Earlier this week, a similar report from the New York Fed showed its future business conditions index registered the steepest one-month drop since the Sept 11 terrorist attacks. Meantime, factories in both regions are reporting rising prices.

Consumer and business confidence is still high – it’s just not quite as giddy as before. Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James Financial in St. Petersburg, Florida

Those reports followed the Institute for Supply Management’s manufactur­ing survey released Apr 2, which showed a measure of materials prices-paid also rose to an almost seven-year high in March. About 32 per cent of respondent­s’ comments were related to the threat of duties, which hadn’t yet gone into effect when the survey was done.

Concerns ranged from higher costs to limited availabili­ty around production schedules, according to Timothy Fiore, chairman of the group’s factory survey committee.

Small firms may also be seeing an impact. The National Federation of Independen­t Business’s index of smallbusin­ess optimism fell in March to a five-month low, with expansion plans and sales expectatio­ns easing. While overall sentiment is still near a 45-year high, eight of the 10 components that make up the gauge declined in March.

On the household side, the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort report showed a monthly gauge of economic expectatio­ns slid in April to match its 2018 low.

At the same time, its weekly measure of sentiment edged up to a fresh 17-year high, though its economic component slipped to the lowest since January.

Last week’s figures from the University of Michigan showed consumer sentiment fell more than forecast in April to a threemonth low.

That report also said 29 per cent of respondent­s made spontaneou­s references to trade policies, with nearly all of the comments being negative.

 ??  ?? The US Capitol in Washington.
The US Capitol in Washington.
 ?? — WP-Bloomberg photos ?? Pedestrian­s walk along Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Mar 19.
— WP-Bloomberg photos Pedestrian­s walk along Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Mar 19.
 ??  ?? Stacks of 2017 50 subject uncut sheets of US$1 dollar notes bearing the name of US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington on Nov 15, 2017.
Stacks of 2017 50 subject uncut sheets of US$1 dollar notes bearing the name of US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington on Nov 15, 2017.

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