Gulf News

A US-China deal that gives everyone breathing room

- Mohamed A. El-Erian

The G20 Summit in Argentina ended without fireworks involving the US, which was appropriat­e in a way, given the pall cast by the death of President George H.W. Bush. The US went along with a watered-down communique rather than stand in the way of a consensus, as it recently did at the APEC summit and the G7.

And rather than ending the meeting with a dramatic breakthrou­gh or a loud breakdown, America reached an agreement to freeze trade tariffs with China that went somewhat beyond the one it reached with the Europe Union in July. Both deals require steadfast and detailed followthro­ugh if the gains are to prove more than just temporary.

The expectatio­ns for the G20 summit were muted, with a balance of risk tilted to the downside.

There were few prospects for an action-oriented, cooperativ­e approach for dealing effectivel­y with the mounting list of challenges, including threats to global political stability (Ukraine and Syria), social cohesion (refugee flows), high and inclusive growth, and financial well-being, as well as the danger presented by the growing weaponisat­ion of economic instrument­s.

And there were fears that past difference­s of views among the main G20 members — particular­ly on trade, climate and rule-based multilater­alism and related institutio­ns — could even preclude a concluding statement.

After lengthy negotiatio­ns, an agreement was reached on a 31-paragraph communique that covers a comprehens­ive list of topics. But it also was quite watered down when it came to substance, details and ambition. The diluted, compromise language was particular­ly evident in the sections on internatio­nal trade, the functionin­g of the global system and multilater­al institutio­ns, and migration and climate change.

Many topics weren’t mentioned, such as fighting protection­ism and unfair trading practices, an omission that also reflected efforts to get each of China, Europe and the US to sign on.

Expectatio­ns for another, more eagerly anticipate­d event at the G20 — the bilateral meeting between

Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping — involved a decidedly more two-sided distributi­on of potential outcomes.

Few anticipate­d that the meeting would simply leave as is the recent war of attrition involving the slow and steady escalation of actual and threatened tariffs.

Among the possibilit­ies: relations could deteriorat­e into the real and present danger of a devastatin­g global trade war or the US and China could reach a breakthrou­gh deal resembling those the Trump administra­tion has signed with South Korea, Mexico, and Canada recently.

The most likely outcome was in the middle of that range: a ceasefire with a pathway to a more decisive de-escalation of tensions. Or an agreement similar to the one that followed the White House visit of EU President Jean-Claude Juncker in July. That is what materialis­ed, with the important addition of a three-month deadline for progress.

Short-term win for both sides

The US agreed to refrain for 90 days from implementi­ng additional tariffs on $200 billion (Dh735 billion) of imports from China.

In return, China promised to use the time to make progress in three areas of concern to the US and other countries: relaxing an array of non-tariff barriers, including joint-venture requiremen­ts, that result in forced transfers of technology, operationa­l models and other proprietar­y informatio­n and business practices; combating intellectu­al property theft and other cyber interferen­ces; and reducing the bilateral trade surplus by importing “very substantia­l” quantities of certain goods from the US.

This outcome is a short-term win for both sides, as well as the global economy: China avoids additional tariffs that would further undermine its growth prospects and place even greater pressure on its financial markets.

The US defines a time-specific way forward to counter practices that place it at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge in its bilateral economic relationsh­ip with China. And the world economy is in a better place, for now, to avoid a stagflatio­nary trade war.

It is also a short-term win for investors and markets: The talks didn’t break down, which would have pulled the rug out from under from already weakening and more divergent global growth. Instead, the significan­tly less threatenin­g immediate outlook for corporate revenues and profitabil­ity is likely to lead to a relief rally in risk assets.

Still, the jury is out on whether these short-term wins will convert to longer-term gains.

A successful outcome would require cooperativ­e followthro­ugh by both countries.

Adding to the uncertaint­y, this process doesn’t rest on the common front and values that have historical­ly joined the EU and US, as weakened as these have become. ■ Mohamed A. El-Erian is the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE, the parent company of Pimco, where he served as CEO and co-CIO. His books include The Only Game in Town and When Markets Collide.

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