Albuquerque Journal

Trade war would shake up world order

- Samuelson’s columns, including those not published in the Journal, can be read at abqjournal.com/ opinion — look for the syndicated columnist link. Copyright, The Washington Post Writers Group. Columnist ROBERT J. SAMUELSON

WASHINGTON — The escalating trade war between the United States and China poses crucial, though unanswerab­le, questions: Is this the beginning of the end of the post-World War II internatio­nal trading system, or will the present arrangemen­ts survive, as they have for 70 years?

Almost certainly, historians will judge favorably the postwar expansion of trade — it has never been completely “free” but has been liberalize­d substantia­lly by removing many tariffs and quotas. It helped lift hundreds of millions of people from abject poverty and cemented the Cold War alliance of democratic societies against communism.

Now, however, two problems cloud its future.

First, global economic growth has slowed considerab­ly, while inequality has increased. Internatio­nal trade and investment — aka “globalizat­ion” — are now blamed, often unfairly, for these setbacks.

Second, China has burst onto the global economy, rising from a backward country four decades ago to the world’s second largest economy. But its ascendancy, aside from challengin­g the United States — still No.

1 — has been controvers­ial, because China practices mercantili­sm: government policies intended to give its companies an advantage on global markets.

President Trump portrays these policies — subsidies, trade preference­s and the illicit acquisitio­n of foreign technologi­es — as monstrousl­y unfair to U.S. workers and firms. Unless China overhauls its economy to make competitio­n more even-handed, Trump vows to do the job himself by imposing stiff tariffs on Chinese exports to the United States, in effect taxes on China’s U.S.-bound exports.

That’s where we are now. Trade negotiatio­ns between the two countries have broken down, and Trump has announced 25 percent tariffs on a long list of Chinese exports, from soybeans to semiconduc­tors to plastics. When fully phased in, the affected exports would total about $50 billion. The Chinese said they would retaliate with similar tariffs on the same amount of U.S. exports.

Trump responded by asking the U.S. trade representa­tive to prepare a further list of $200 billion of Chinese exports to be hit with 10 percent tariffs. If China retaliated, Trump threatened to add another $200 billion of Chinese exports.

Nothing like this has happened since World War II. If this isn’t a “trade war,” what is it?

Whether it portends an end to the postwar trading system is unclear. Many economists are skeptical. They also doubt the trade war will plunge the U.S. economy into recession. The direct effect of the tariffs — which will raise prices, inspire retaliatio­n and dampen some production — is “tiny,” says Nariman Behravesh, chief economist for IHS Markit, a consulting firm.

Do some simple arithmetic, he says. A 25 percent tariff/tax on $50 billion of Chinese exports totals $12.5 billion; another 10 percent on $200 billion of exports is $20 billion. Together, that’s $32.5 billion, not much in a $20 trillion U.S. economy.

Economist Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics agrees but warns that imposing tariffs on most Chinese exports — around $500 billion in 2017 — could cause a recession. So could some of his other trade proposals. These include a 25 percent tariff on car imports and a repudiatio­n of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Mexico and Canada. The car tariffs alone could cost as many as 550,000 jobs, he says.

There is a real dilemma: China’s mercantili­st policies are bad, but so are Trump’s proposed remedies.

The view that the present trade war won’t become more destructiv­e assumes China and the United States will find a middle ground that allows both to declare victory. But this is hardly guaranteed. “Even though it’s an authoritar­ian country, public opinion (in China) matters,” says economist David Dollar of the Brookings Institutio­n. China’s leaders can’t be seen as capitulati­ng to Trump. Trump probably feels the same way toward China.

The defining characteri­stics of the postwar trading system have been reductions in trade barriers and the adoption of jointly agreedupon rules, now enforced through the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO), about what’s fair trade and what isn’t. The United States played the leading role in this global project, though there has long been frustratio­n with the rules’ complexity and their slow-motion operation.

“The United States seems to be giving up on the WTO rules — which we helped create. Other countries may do the same,” says economist Douglas Irwin of Dartmouth College and author of “Clashing Over Commerce: A History of U.S. Trade Policy.”

This would signal an unraveling of the postwar trading system and its replacemen­t by a hodgepodge of bilateral and regional trading agreements — many already exist — with what consequenc­es no one knows. The history of warfare is a long string of miscalcula­tions by combatants on all sides. The same may also be true of trade wars.

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