The Guardian (USA)

Trump's 'America first' policy offers Beijing and Brussels a chance to lead

- Barry Eichengree­n

Donald Trump’s “America first” policies are widely regarded as an abdication of global leadership, sounding the death knell of the post-second world war multilater­al order that the US shaped and sustained.

There is much truth to this view. At the same time, this troubling turn represents a reversion to longstandi­ng US values. Acknowledg­ing that the second half of the 20th century was an anomaly, rather than the norm, raises troubling questions about the nature of US leadership and the fate of multilater­alism after Trump.

As a resource-rich continenta­l economy separated from Europe and Asia by vast Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the US has always been tempted by isolationi­sm. Thomas Jefferson famously spoke of no entangling alliances. The Monroe doctrine, from 1823, was not just an assertion of US dominance in the western hemisphere but also an effort to keep the US out of European wars.

In the 20th century, the US entered the world wars several years late, long after the stakes were clear, and only after being directly provoked by German U-boat attacks and the Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor.

Moreover, the US long sought to advance its interests abroad unilateral­ly rather than through multilater­al engagement. The Monroe doctrine is a case in point. The US’s refusal after the first world war to join the League of Nations is another.

Equally important, domestic business has long held inordinate sway over US economic and foreign policies. This historical pattern reflects the fact that it was the first country of continenta­l scope to industrial­ise. Its immense internal market supported the efforts of US entreprene­urs to pioneer the large multidivis­ional corporatio­n in the second half of the 19th century.

This was the age of the robber barons, who held sway over not just the US economy but also its politics. For example, the “big four” California railway tycoons (Leland Stanford, Collis Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Charles Crocker) controlled not just freight rates but also the state legislatur­e. Viewed from this perspectiv­e, the Trump administra­tion’s willingnes­s to cater to domestic corporatio­ns’ every regulatory whim is firmly in step with US history.

Americans’ deep, abiding and historical­ly rooted distrust of government also reinforces isolationi­sm. The view that government only creates problems is not just a product of Fox News. The US’s founders were profoundly suspicious of overweenin­g government, from which they suffered under British colonialis­m.

After independen­ce from Britain, the fact and then the legacy of slavery created deep-seated opposition to federal interferen­ce with local social arrangemen­ts and states’ rights. Rallies of gun-rights advocates at state capitols and the occupation of federal land by western ranchers are peculiarly American aberration­s, but they are also modern-day manifestat­ions of the longheld view that government cannot be trusted and that the best government is one that governs least. Trump and his policies stand squarely in this tradition.

The existentia­l threat of the second world war was enough to shock the US out of its isolationi­st, anti-government tendencies, at least temporaril­y. Possessing the single strongest economy, along with politician­s, including presidents, with personal experience of war, the postwar US was able to provide the leadership needed to construct an open, multilater­al order.

But it was naive to think that this was “the end of history” – that the US would continue to exercise this kind of internatio­nal leadership indefinite­ly. In the event, growing economic insecurity, together with the rise of identity politics (reflecting the inability of the oncedomina­nt white majority to adjust to the reality of greater socioecono­mic diversity), was enough to cause the American body politic to revert to its unilateral, isolationi­st mindset.

The next US president – whoever she or he may be – is unlikely to be as committed to free trade, alliance building, and multilater­al institutio­ns and rules as the presidents of the second half of the 20th century. But it is still possible to imagine multilater­alism without the US. Climate change illustrate­s the point: Trump’s withdrawal from the 2015 Paris climate agreement has not weakened the commitment of other countries to its targets, nor should it.

Another example is how the European Union, China and 15 other countries reacted to Trump’s efforts to paralyse the World Trade Organisati­on by leaving its appellate body inquorate with too few judges. In response, they set up their own ad hoc, shadow appellate body to maintain WTO standards and procedures.

As this last case demonstrat­es, the successor to US global leadership must be collective global leadership, with the two largest economies, the EU and China, at its fore. Unlike the US, the EU is making every effort to work with China. Given the inevitable geopolitic­al tensions, cooperatio­n won’t be easy. But, as the US once understood, it is the only way.

• Barry Eichengree­n isprofesso­r ofeconomic­s at the University of California, Berkeley, and a former senior policy adviser at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. His latest book isThe Populist Temptation: Economic Grievance and Political Reaction in the Modern Era.

 ??  ?? The Chinese and EU flags on display before a summit in Brussels. Photograph: John Thys/AP
The Chinese and EU flags on display before a summit in Brussels. Photograph: John Thys/AP

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