Business World

G20 urges dialogue to resolve trade tensions that threaten global growth

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GROUP OF 20 (G20) members pleaded for increased dialogue to defuse escalating trade tensions that could hit global economic growth hard. Finance ministers and central bankers from 20 leading economies closed a two-day meeting in Buenos Aires warning that “heightened trade and geopolitic­al tensions” threaten the economic expansion.

BUENOS AIRES — Group of 20 (G20) members pleaded on Sunday for increased dialogue to defuse escalating trade tensions that could hit global economic growth hard.

Finance ministers and central bankers from 20 leading economies closed a two- day meeting in Buenos Aires warning that “heightened trade and geopolitic­al tensions” threaten the economic expansion.

It comes at a time when US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist policies have provoked ire from traditiona­l allies such as the European Union ( EU), Canada and Mexico, and sparked a series of retaliator­y measures.

The G20’s final communique stressed “the need to step up dialogue and actions to mitigate risks and enhance confidence” amidst fears of an escalating global trade war.

While the statement did not mention the United States, which is at the center of trade disputes with G20 members China, the EU and others, it demonstrat­ed more concern than in March, when the group avoided the issue altogether.

Argentina’s Economy Minister Nicolas Dujovne hinted that the G20 could not afford a rupture over trade disputes which he said should be resolved directly between government­s or through the World Trade Organizati­on.

“It’s not about denying difference­s,” Mr. Dujovne told reporters at the conclusion of the meeting. But “we have to try to emphasize consensus because we recognize the importance of keeping this group alive and in harmony.”

During the 2008 global financial crisis the G20 was critical in preventing an even worse outcome and saved millions of jobs, he said, noting that “it’s in the bad times when you see how essential it is.”

But Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin reiterated his claim that the US merely wants “more balanced trade” with other countries.

Mnuchin also dismissed the economic impact of the raft of tariff hikes and retaliator­y duties, saying so far they have only affected the US on a “micro” scale. But from a “macro standpoint we do not yet see any significan­t pattern on the economy.”

US businesses have been hit with a series of punitive measures by China, the EU, Canada and Mexico, including tariffs on soybean, motorcycle­s, bourbon and other goods, while manufactur­ers are complainin­g about rising prices of key supplies subject to new US duties.

‘ALLIES NOT FOES’

EU finance chief Pierre Moscovici hit out at Mr. Trump’s protection­ist

policies, but said cool heads are needed to resolve the dispute.

The US and EU have been at loggerhead­s since Mr. Trump angered European allies by imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum. He also has threatened to hit auto imports with duties which would be especially hard for Germany.

While the EU is “willing to build bridges,” Mr. Moscovici told reporters “we believe that targeting us is certainly inappropri­ate... and that we must act with the US as allies — not foes but allies.”

Mr. Mnuchin insisted the US wants to “resolve the trade issues with the EU” and the complaint often is more about “non- tariff barriers” than tariffs.

“We have a trade imbalance with many countries as a result of not exactly free and fair trade,” he said. Earlier in the meeting he said the dispute with the EU could be resolved by agreeing to trade with no tariffs, no barriers and no subsidies.

Mr. Muscovici warned that “further trade escalation conflicts would negatively affect” all the countries involved, the US included. Protection­ism benefits no one, and creates “no winners, only casualties.”

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) chief Christine Lagarde agreed, and again spoke out against the tit-for-tat tariffs and urged that “trade conflicts be resolved via internatio­nal cooperatio­n without resort to exceptiona­l measures.”

The IMF warned recently that in a worst- case scenario, $ 430 billion of global GDP — or a half percentage point — could be lost in 2020 if all tariff threats and retaliatio­ns are carried out.

As well as imposing tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum, Mr. Trump hit China with a 25% punitive levy on $34 billion of goods, with tariffs on the way on an additional $16 billion, and $200 billion more under considerat­ion.

And in a television interview aired last week, Mr. Trump threatened to impose duties on the entire $500 billion of goods the US imports from China.

“We want our companies to have the same access to their markets that they have to us,” Mnuchin said about the Asian giant. “We don’t force joint ventures on them, we don’t want our companies to have joint ventures there.”

The US has long complained that China steals US technology through forced transfers or outright theft, and the issue is at the heart of Mr. Trump’s trade offensive.

Mr. Mnuchin said, “we want to have the right to protect our IP and our technology, anywhere in the world, that’s not just China specific.”

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