The Sun (Malaysia)

It takes two to start a trade war

> Economists agree that cool heads will prevail as nations acknowledg­e there’ll be no winners in a full-blown tit-for-tat

- BY V. RAGANANTHI­NI

PETALING JAYA: With US President Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric of inwardlook­ing trade policies now coming into play in the form of import tariffs, it raises the question of whether these are telling signs of a brewing trade war.

RHB Banking Group chief economist and head of research Dr Arup Raha told SunBiz that there has not been a trade war since the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act in the 1930s and any answers at this point will be pure speculatio­n.

“Any answers right now will be pure speculatio­n. The truth is we haven’t had a trade war since the 1930s. And with organisati­ons, such as the World Trade Organisati­on, who are meant to resolve trade disputes, an all out war seems unlikely. There may be token retaliator­y tariffs but hopefully there will be a resolution before it gets very serious,” he noted.

“Moreover, Trump has a tendency to go back on policy announceme­nts, so one can’t be sure how aggressive­ly he will follow a protection­ist regime.

“That said, the one consistent message from Trump since the 1980s is that he is not really a free trader. So, we may be in uncharted waters,” he added.

On how Malaysia will be affected, in the event of a trade war, especially with the US being one of its major trading partners, Arup said Malaysia will be undoubtedl­y affected should a trade war which shrinks global trade growth unfolds, as trade forms an important component of the Malaysian economy.

On whether more trade tarriff’s are on the horizon, Arup said it is hard to tell at this juncture.

“Hard to tell. EU has threatened tariffs on jeans, bourbon, etc which are more symbolic than anything. China has been relatively calm so far.There are no winners if this escalates into a full blown trade war so cooler heads should prevail,” he explained.

Meanwhile, in light of the recent US action, OCBC Bank economist Barnabas Gan noted in his report that, while a trade war is not totally off the cards, market reaction to Trump’s action has been unsurprisi­ngly positive.

“Market reaction was unsurprisi­ngly positive, with Wall Street rallying modestly as the details of the watered-down tariffs meant that initial risks over trade wars can likely be avoided,” he added.

Gan said tariffs without exemption could do more harm than good and likely to impede the US economy as well as global growth and trade activities.

And should exemptions fail to materialis­e, retaliatio­n fears could once again be at the forefront of worries. Retaliator­y trade deals by US’ trade partners wars could spell cascading woes into other US industries and its key exports, and likely inhibit Trump’s agenda of “Putting America First”,” he added.

S&P Global Ratings also flagged concerns of the US’ impending tariffs increasing the risk of a retaliator­y action from the affected countries, which could in turn trigger a trade war.

The ratings agency said most of US trading partners have signaled their concern on the announceme­nt and stated that they are prepared to retaliate with their own tariffs on goods imported from the US.

It said while the direct or first-round macroecono­mic impact of these tariffs is likely to be negligible, the overall impact is less certain.

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