Tuesday, March 19, 2024
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The US trade war and its global impact

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Douglas Holtz-Eakin, the President of the American Action Forum, a center-right advocacy group, and a former Director of the Congressional Budget Office under President George W. Bush, called a trade war “the big risk to Trump’s success.” Manuel Perez-Rocha, an Associate Fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies, also said “a full blown trade war is dangerous for both sides. United States exporters can be badly damaged.”
President Donald Trump, on his part, tweeted  on 20 April 2018 arguing otherwise as “When a country (USA) is losing many billions of dollars on trade with virtually every country it does business with, trade wars are good, and easy to win, example, when we are down USD 100 billion with a certain country and they get cute, don’t trade anymore-we win big. It is easy!”
Practially speaking , President Donald Trump’s trade war is heating up. Days after imposing tariffs on USD 34 billion worth of Chinese exports, with an additional USD 16 billion under consideration, the administration of President Trump announced that it was also contemplating tariffs on an extra USD 200 billion worth of Chinese-made products. Just over a month ago, President Trump had also imposed punitive tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from such allies as the EU, Mexico and Canada.
Europe, Mexico and Canada have retaliated, so did China and it has promised to continue retaliation should the United States impose additional tariffs. President Trump is betting that he can win this war. After all, China exports over USD 500 billion to the United States, while the United States exports only USD 130 billion to China.
Doug Irmin, Economic Professor at Dartmouth argued that the effects of President Trump’s trade war will be material. First, punitive tariffs will immediately raise the price of the goods affected. Retaliatory action by the EU, Canada, Mexico and China will do the same to their economies. According to Doug Irmin, President Trump has already threatened that the Canadians and Europeans  will “make a mistake” if they retaliate. There is no reason to believe that President Trump will not answer each counter-tariff with more tariffs of his own. Before we know it, retaliatory actions will be mounting on top of retaliatory actions and consumer prices on a wide spectrum of goods will rise around the world.
But more importantly, Doug Irmin further noted that President Trump’s tariff actions may also destroy global supply chains. These have been built into the DNA of large manufacturing firms all over the world. However, way beyond just benefiting the “biggies,” they also provide jobs in many small firms that are an integral part of these supply chains.
Manuel Perez-Rocha stated that if tariffs and counter-tariffs disrupt this very efficient global division of labor, this indirect consequence of tariffs comes at a cost in inflation that will be a multiple of the direct price effects from punitive tariffs. ‘Ditto’ with just-in-time delivery; which is highly correlated to global supply chains. If it gets unwound, storage costs will rise and so will related consumer prices.
According to Manuel Perez-Rocha, once inflation begins to take hold, there is a more insidious effect it has on prices, usually referred to as “inflationary expectation.” It holds that corporations, consumers, even governments expect next year’s inflation to be just as bad or even worse. In preparing for such event, they make it a self-fulfilling prophecy. To be sure, moderate inflation can be a good thing, especially when it is caused by a booming economy and higher wages increasing the net wealth of large parts of the population.
But this is notably not the scenario of a trade war. Inflation, in this case, is not the result of a booming economy, but it is an externality which no private sector economic agent can control. Therefore, global growth will fall, jobs will be lost, yet prices will jump. Welcome to an economist’s greatest nightmare: Stagflation.
Joshua Meltzer, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute, explained that stagflation puts monetary policy in a conundrum. On the one hand, high inflation demands an increase in interest rates to maintain price stability. Yet at the same time, depressed economic growth demands low interest rates to stimulate the economy.
According to Joshua Meltzer, the exit strategy from stagflation is an uncertain one unless one reverses the original triggers for its occurrence, in this case removes the new tariffs. It is hard to imagine that the administration of President Trump would have the courage for such admission of policy failure.
Accepting the risk of stagflation is especially ludicrous when history has shown that tariffs will simply not bring jobs back to America. The Smoot-Hawley tariffs signed into law by President Herbert Hoover in 1930 and the retaliatory counter-tariffs were a major factor in the Great Depression. As recently as March 2002, the newly-elected President George W. Bush too imposed steel tariffs. After they were found in violation of the rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO), they were lifted in December 2003, but not before some 200,000 jobs had been lost in the United States as a consequence.
Doug Irmin adamantly argued that jobs were lost, because for every single steel factory job created, several more jobs vanished in industries that needed to purchase the pricier steel. According to the Peterson Institute for International Economics, each steel job saved cost the United States economy USD 400,000.
The President’s romantic yearning for the days when America used to be “great,” when industry was protected and when manufacturing jobs were plentiful, brings to memory the words of Robert F. Kennedy, who once said: “There are people in every time and every land who want to stop history in its tracks. They fear the future, mistrust the presence and invoke the security of a comfortable past, which, in fact, never existed.”

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