Arab News

US-Gulf trade ties set to begin new chapter

Energy cooperatio­n paves way for stronger links as Washington embraces multilater­al strategy

- Arab News London AFP

The incoming Biden administra­tion in Washington is set to herald a new chapter of trade ties between the US and the Gulf — as well as with the region’s largest economy.

In recent days, many analysts have speculated over the difference­s between how a Biden and Trumpled US will interact with the oil-exporting Gulf states and Saudi Arabia, the dominant regional economy.

Yet while different administra­tions have had different policy priorities in the region, the overall relationsh­ip has remained strong over the decades. Generation­s of young Saudis have traveled to universiti­es across the US, while generation­s of Americans have comes to work in the Kingdom — many of them employed in the key oil and petrochemi­cal sectors. “Politicall­y, the two sides see eye-to-eye on most regional and internatio­nal issues and that is expected to continue,” wrote Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg, GCC assistant secretary-general for political affairs and negotiatio­n.

“Energy cooperatio­n is now more productive and equal, as the two sides sit on the same side of the table as major producers of oil and gas.” Indeed, both the Gulf and the US, an increasing­ly important supplier of shale oil to the world, have a vested and mutual interest in ensuring oil market stability. This will become especially important in the year ahead as demand begins to recover with an expected pick-up in economic activity likely to follow in the wake of new vaccines.

Beyond oil, the US has strengthen­ed its trade position in the Arab world in recent years with data analyzed by the National

I think President Biden is going to be tough on China — but maybe a different kind of tough.

US-Arab Chamber of Commerce (NUSACC), showing that exports of US goods to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) rose in 2019 to $62.64 billion, up about 4 percent on the previous year. It represente­d the first time since 2014 that US goods sales to the MENA region have ve rebounded. The UAE and Saudi Arabia remain the biggest destinatio­ns for US goods in the Arab world, according to US trade de data. The pair accounted for more ore than half of total US goods exported ported to the MENA region last year r

“After several years of declining sales to the MENA region, American goods ods exports rebounded in 2019,” said David Hamod, NUSACC’s president in a statement earlier r this year. “This is great news for or American manufactur­ers, farmers, ranchers, and other innovannov­ators, whose order books ooks have suffered in major ajor markets around the he world. The Arab world ld

US President-elect Joe Biden says he wants to work with like-minded allies to set the rules in global trade rather than pursue a unilateral approach. continues to be a strong destinatio­n for US exporters.”

The incoming Biden administra­tion follows a Trump presidency heavily defined by a trade war with China that has created collateral damage around th the globe and including the Arab wo world.

The hope of many states s in the region that stand to lose from continuing tensions tension between these two great po powers is that there will be of so some kind of rapprochem­ent that repairs the relationsh­ip betwe between Beijing and Washington.

But there has been no indication to date that there will be a dramat dramatic change in the policy of ag aggressive­ly addressing the trade gap with China.

“I think President Biden is going to be tough on China — but maybe a different kind of o tough,” St Stephen L Lamar, C CEO of

the American Apparel & Footwear Associatio­n, said earlier this week. President-elect Joe Biden has said that he will work with US allies to set the rules in global trade.

This may represent one of the more significan­t difference­s in style between both administra­tions. While President Trump’s trade policy was unilateral in its approach to China and to a lesser extent with the EU, Biden wants to pursue a multilater­al approach in aligning like-minded allies to counter the rising influence of China on the global stage.

This strategy may have significan­t implicatio­ns for how US trade with the region will be defined in the years ahead.

One of Trump’s first big announceme­nts soon after entering office was to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p ( TPP) that had originally been floated by the Obama administra­tion.

Less than four years later, 15 Asia-Pacific countries, including China, have just signed up to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) — effectivel­y the world’s largest trade deal.

Encompassi­ng almost a third of the people on the planet, the widerangin­g agreement will demand a major response from the US.

“We make up 25 percent of the world’s trading capacity, of the economy of the world. We need to be aligned with the other democracie­s — another 25 percent or more — so that we can set the rules of the road,” Biden said.

The alternativ­e would be to have “China and others dictate outcomes because they are the only game in town,” he said.

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 ?? AFP ?? US farmers, manufactur­ers and innovators have benefited from a trade rebound with the Arab world in recent years, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE the biggest regional markets for American goods.
AFP US farmers, manufactur­ers and innovators have benefited from a trade rebound with the Arab world in recent years, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE the biggest regional markets for American goods.

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