The Philippine Star

Recession

- ALEX MAGNO Positionin­g

At the rate he is going, Donald Trump could singlehand­edly push the global economy into recession. Like a drunken cowboy firing at everything in sight, Trump has decreed tariffs all around. Now he is about to reap retaliatio­n from friend and foe alike.

This week, India will impose tariffs on a range of US products in retaliatio­n for Trump’s arbitrary tariffs on steel and aluminum products entering the American market. China, as early as next week, will impose tariffs on American exports entering her markets. Canada has indicated it will soon impose tariffs. The European Community will do the same. It is Donald Trump against the world. Very soon, the US economy, especially the “red states” supportive of Trump, will feel the pain. Some economists calculate that Donald Trump’s unprovoked trade war will cause the loss of 16 jobs for every one created by protection­ist measures.

A general slowdown in the growth of the global economy will inhibit growth of the US economy as well. The low unemployme­nt rates and respectabl­e expansion Trump inherited from the Obama years will dissipate without the context of robust global growth.

Since a trade war harms all sides, the countries on the receiving end of Trump’s tariffs will suffer pain as well.

Last week, after Trump announced tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese exports, the markets took it as a signal that a trade war has commenced. Stock markets weakened across the board. By the time the bloodletti­ng is done, trillions of dollars worth of market capital might have evaporated. Those dollars could have been productive­ly used to create jobs and foster economic activity.

Under Trump, the US alone appears swimming the other way. While India, China and the rest of the dynamic Asia-Pacific region are negotiatin­g free trade agreements, the US is closing down its economy. The US is assuming long-term damage because of Trump’s crude understand­ing of economics.

Tariffs impose unnecessar­y costs on the economic system. Those costs are ultimately borne by consumers. In the frenzy of tariff imposition­s he is engaged in, Trump does not understand he is harming his own consumers.

In his narrow view of things, Trump sees only the balance of trade numbers. But for economies, it is growth that matters. By killing trade, Trump kills growth.

By waging a trade war, Trump is playing to his political base. But that same base will bear the brunt of retaliator­y measures undertaken by other countries. China’s retaliator­y tariffs, for instance, target American agricultur­al exports such as soybean, pork and corn. These are products from the American heartland, the states that voted for Trump.

Trump’s economic strategy focuses on increasing American coal and natural gas exports. Over the past few years, China has been the fastest growing market for these energy exports. Should relations continue to deteriorat­e, the US will likely find itself with a lot of coal and gas it could not sell.

Although China enjoys a hefty trade surplus with the US, the world’s second largest economy is also a major source of investment­s in the US – not to mention being a major lender to finance America’s chronic budget deficit. Chinese investment­s in the US could fall into a trickle.

The looming trade war is taking a larger toll. Everywhere, growth projection­s are being adjusted downwards.

But Trump will likely push ahead with his protection­ist measures. The rest of the world will simply have to discount American participat­ion in the large project of growing the global economy to eradicate poverty.

The Philippine­s is not directly involved in the trade war Trump has launched. But we will suffer from the strong dollar policy and the general weakening of global growth.

There are some ways for us to reposition and find opportunit­ies in the changing trade configurat­ions. We could, for instance, try to export more agricultur­al produce to China to replace American exports to that country.

On the whole, however, a general slowdown in global economic growth will cause us more harm than good. By expanding our access to the networks of free trade, we could contribute to keeping global growth going despite Trump’s damaging effects on the rest of the world.

A higher interest rate regime is unavoidabl­e. The US will raise its interest rate and that sucks out hot money from our economy. We have no choice but raise interest rates ourselves to protect our currency and curb inflation. Higher interest rate will add more friction to our own economic expansion.

With America building walls around her economy, we can no longer look to the US market as a source of strength for our own economy. We have to look for new possibilit­ies for closer economic engagement with large economies such as China and India. Doing so will help keep our own economic expansion going.

Fortunatel­y, we have reinvigora­ted our relationsh­ip with China over the past two years. Imagine if we entered this period with our bilateral relationsh­ip with China as cool as it was during the Aquino years. We would have been left trying to grow with this major market effectivel­y closed to us. With Trump’s protection­ism, the US market will be barren for the emerging economies.

Australia and New Zealand are trying to keep alive the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p Trump abandoned when he became president. We should try and be part of this.

The ASEAN is gaining ground in building a free trading regional common market. We must be at the forefront of this.

Free trade, not protection­ism, will help sustain our economic growth.

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