Bangkok Post

G20 papers over cracks in order

- CRAIG STIRLING BLOOMBERG

LONDON: As global finance chiefs return from their first collective engagement with the Trump administra­tion, they’re bringing home a load of unfinished business.

While the weekend meeting of the Group of 20 in the German spa town of Baden-Baden kept up its tradition of a communique to present a veneer of agreement, it only did so by papering over new cracks in the order underpinni­ng the world economy.

Barely hinting at the merits of free trade, the statement’s omissions show how global economic diplomacy is now beset with a fault line that could overshadow it for months, if not years.

As recently as last July, the G20 had promised to “resist all forms of protection­ism,” a pledge now absent as the previous consensus on commerce is challenged by the recent election of US President Donald Trump.

Before he and the rest of the group’s leaders meet again in Hamburg in July, his counterpar­ts have little more than 100 days to gauge if the removal of those words represents the beginning or the end of his administra­tion’s attempt to reset global terms of trade that it abhors as economical­ly unfair.

“Saying that the G20 wishes to avoid protection­ism does not necessaril­y make it so — arguably protection­ism has risen in the past few years in spite of public pronouncem­ents,” Paul Donovan, global chief economist at UBS Wealth Management in London, said by email.

“However, the deliberate change in tone reinforces the idea that on trade, the Trump administra­tion will implement at least some of the campaign rhetoric.”

That shift followed hours of wrangling that kept officials in suspense on whether the G20 would even mention trade, with occasional doubts that a communique might be produced at all.

The US delegation, led by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, wanted a reference on the need for trade to be “fair” while China, a previously unlikely champion in such matters, led a defense of the existing rules-based regime under the World Trade Organisati­on.

In the end, ministers agreed that “we are working to strengthen the contributi­on of trade to our economies,” a compromise to salvage what remained of the foundation­s of an understand­ing that the G20 had long largely taken for granted.

Participan­ts such as Pierre Moscovici, the European Union’s commission­er for economic and financial affairs, are now holding out for the Hamburg summit to repair the damage.

“The single most important decision which helped to fend off a type of depression like in the 1930s in the wake of the Lehman Brothers collapse was that we avoided a fallback into protection­ism and that we kept the global economy open,” Moscovici told reporters in Baden-Baden. “I cannot overstate the importance of avoiding any rollback on this.”

Speaking i n Hanover on Sunday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for a concerted effort to defend free trade, saying global markets could be both open and fair.

“Of course we want fair markets, but we don’t want to put up barriers,” Merkel said.

One area of contention that remained relatively untouched at the G20 meeting was currencies.

Despite Trump administra­tion criticism of Germany’s trade surplus, US officials signed up to the G20’s prior comments, “including that we will refrain from competitiv­e devaluatio­ns and we will not target our exchange rates for competitiv­e purposes.”

That lack of formal discord doesn’t exclude it also becoming another G20 battlegrou­nd in due course, not least as part of the wider trade discussion.

“The G20 communique danced around the key topic of protection­ism and currency manipulati­on but bears the imprint of the White House trade concerns,” said Neil Mackinnon, an economist at VTB Capital in London and a former UK Treasury official. “An increase in trade protection­ism is a key downside risk for the global economy.”

However the discourse evolves, Donovan of UBS observes that such arguments over trade risk being a quarter of a century out of date, because they focus on physical commerce and ignore the changing nature of the economy.

Looked at through that prism, the contours of global trade are different: Trump’s complaints about the US trade deficit overlooks a surplus in services that amounts to $248 billion, encompassi­ng exports from education to software.

Donovan predicts that physical commerce will decline in relative importance because of the virtual economy and the use of robotics to localise production. “Supply chains are starting to shrink, and that process is likely to continue.”

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