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ECB: Protection­ism may raise, not cut, trade deficits

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FRANKFURT: Protection­ist trade policies may increase, rather than reduce, a country’s trade deficit, the European Central Bank (ECB) said in a study on Wednesday, just days after finance chiefs of the world’s top 20 economies dropped their pledge for open trade.

Seeking to reduce a large trade deficit, Donald Trump’s US administra­tion has proposed a series of protection­ist measures, such as new import duties.

The White House also wants to revisit some of its trade relationsh­ips, including with key partners Germany and China, which both sell more goods to the US than they buy from it.

Indeed, the US has already pulled out of the Trans-Pacific trade deal, asked for a review of the North American Free Trade Agreement and refused to reaffirm its pledge for open and free trade at the G20 meeting last weekend, raising fears that global trade will take a hit.

Yet the authors of the ECB paper – published in its regular Economic Bulletin – believe the opposite recipe is needed. They said liberalisi­ng global trade and importing cheaper intermedia­te goods improves competitiv­eness, helping firms keep their cutting edge over rivals and lifting the country’s exports.

“Adopting policies that facilitate innovation and reduce protection­ist barriers may help to improve an economy’s competitiv­eness,” the ECB paper said. “Multilater­al initiative­s aimed at trade and financial liberalisa­tion may also reduce an economy’s external imbalances.” “Participat­ing in global value chains may give an economy a temporary competitiv­e edge that results in a rise in its current account balance,” the ECB added.

The study also appeared to dismiss the US administra­tion’s claim that countries running big current account surpluses may be using unfair trade practices.

Instead, it argued that countries will view their competitiv­e edge as temporary, behaving with caution as they expect others to liberalise trade to improve their own efficiency and restore competitiv­eness.

“As a consequenc­e, in order to smooth consumptio­n over time, part of the income gain in the domestic economy will be saved, which improves the current account balance,” the ECB added.

It added that if the advantage is perceived as permanent, then the current account balance is likely to deteriorat­e as consumptio­n and imports rise to match what income levels. – Reuters

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