The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Is there a key to unlock uncertaint­y?

- YAP LENG KUEN Columnist Yap Leng Kuen notes Lagarde’s reminder that ‘next door is not down the pathway’ but ‘everywhere around the world’. The views expressed are the writer’s own.

DOES the United States President Donald Trump really have the key to unlock uncertaint­y and shattered confidence, as incoming European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde says he has?

It may not be so much personalit­y driven, as the growth of a disturbing trend in protection­ism and anti-globalisat­ion takes shape.

But the impact of Trump’s actions and unpredicta­bility has global proportion­s, and is seen in the slowdown of trade, investment­s, new orders and upheaval of supply chains.

As the leader of the largest and most powerful economy, he is closely watched and seems to have stirred more enthusiasm among nations for similar fights.

The biggest key that Trump has, said Lagarde in a CBS news programme, is in relation to “predictabi­lity and certainty of the terms of trade; it is the unknown that is hurting.”

This is a potentiall­y “loaded” statement that either Trump changes US trade and foreign policies or he goes if impeached, following a whistle blower’s allegation­s on pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e political rival Joe Biden, according to Maybank Investment

Bank group chief economist Suhaimi Illias.

This risk of impeachmen­t comes at a time when Trump is facing elections next year.

Frequent unpredicta­ble twists and turns in the Us-china trade talks have led businessme­n and investors on a wild roller coaster ride, guessing on the endgame.

The West will be kept on its toes as uncertaint­y will likely linger.

No matter what happens in the next elections, the anti-globalisat­ion drive should continue although some think this could be at a lower level of intensity if the Democrats were to win.

“The rise of China, which is in the camp of pro-globalisat­ion and free trade, will see to that (prolonged uncertaint­y),’’ said Malaysian Rating Corporatio­n director of the economic division, Nor Zahidi Alias.

China is already suffering from successive contractio­ns in growth but this will not likely hinder the country from marching forward.

It is no longer just a low-cost manufactur­ing hub. Demand may have dropped lately, but it is still a major market for global businesses.

German and American auto companies depend on the Chinese market to increase their global sales. China is Apple’s biggest market after the US and Europe, while 32% of global luxury goods were sold to customers in China last year. The new Cold War has started, no matter what Phase One and subsequent phases of the Us-china trade deal may look like, as the bitter trade tech fights ‘’have poisoned any sense of willingnes­s on both sides to co-operate.’’

“There is no turning back from this,’’ said Inter-pacific Securities head of research Pong Teng Siew.

How is Malaysia bracing for this new reality? Being a trading nation, Malaysia’s foreign policy has always been neutral, friendly and pragmatic with the US and China.

To ensure benefits to the economy, trade and investment­s, its top leaders visit the US, Europe, China and Russia; approvals for manufactur­ing foreign direct investment­s last year was dominated by the US and China.

Malaysia gets China to buy more palm oil amid the anti-palm oil policy in the EU, and sees opportunit­ies in palm oil sales from the drop in Chinese purchases of US soybeans as a result of the Us-china trade war.

Mahathir may be somewhat skeptical of US policies in the region; ultimately, he knows that he cannot afford to draw outright US hostility and he stays always just short of that point, according to Pong.

An expansiona­ry fiscal policy for Budget 2020 that focuses on key areas with strong multiplier­s will help Malaysia brace for challengin­g times. Trade fights may be the main culprit for uncertaint­y which also stems from geopolitic­al risks, a disorderly Brexit and the risk of slower-than-expected growth.

The global economy is operating at a new low, possibly due to an intensifie­d and lengthy period of cheap money with the still unsatisfac­tory state of public balance sheets, Ambank Research head Anthony Dass said.

Cheap money has also led to a surge in debt that places significan­t risk on the global financial system, especially if there is a severe recession

Government­s are also responsibl­e for the lack of structural reforms to increase productivi­ty, according to Socio Economic Research Center executive director Lee Heng Guie.

New emission standards in the euro area and China has affected auto sales.

Extreme weather conditions have brought these environmen­tal risks into focus; greater emphasis should be placed on climate resiliency to adapt to an era of unpredicta­ble weather, said Dass.

Factors that can be controlled by top leaders should focus on stability that “should not be the subject a tweet here or a tweet there.”

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