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Outlook for Fed: Cloudy with chance of trade war

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

By and Ann Saphir

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve digested the Trump administration's massive tax cuts and plan to boost spending with barely a hiccup, but Washington's sudden push for steep tariffs on and aluminium imports could saddle with the worst of both worlds - rising and a slowing global

The combination of fiscal stimulus, which Fed officials viewed as hardly a game-changer for monetary policy, and a brewing trade war is a recipe for the sort of no-win situation central bankers faced in the 1970s when they had to stomach high or run the risk that interest rate increases would trigger a recession.

The tariffs that said he plans to levy next week, and the global reaction to the announcement, punctured what had been a fairly calm and even bullish picture of the U. S. outlined by Fed during testimony in this week.

The central will now have to factor in the macroeconomic impact of the tariffs, which is expected to be small in itself, but also the broader risk of global retaliation, government-imposed price pressures on a variety of goods, and an ebbing of world trade.

Canada, and the have already threatened countermeasures, representing what economists refer to as a "deadweight loss" to global welfare. The on Friday said Trump's move likely would damage the U. S. as well as the economies of other nations.

"What you have to worry about is that this starts governments globally down the path of and trade wars," said Ward McCarthy, at investment Jefferies. "If that's where this goes, it's very bad for economic growth ... It would really complicate and confuse the picture."

Much is uncertain. The tariffs - 25 percent on and 10 percent on aluminium - have not been imposed, though Trump has promised that they will be.

That was enough to send U. S. stocks reeling on Thursday and early on Friday.

They recovered some losses on Friday afternoon, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average <. DJI> was still down about 2.5 percent over the two days while the broader <. SPX> index had shed about 1.6 percent.

RIPPLE EFFECTS

It is not known how broad a set of countries the tariffs would reach, or how dramatically those countries might react.

Though the seemed initially dismissive of the risks, with Trump tweeting on Friday that "Trade wars are good, and easy to win," the tariffs could undermine some of the economic benefits arising from the overhaul of the U. S. tax code late last year.

The primary metals makers and the 373,000 workers in those industries who would most benefit from the tariffs account for a small slice of though they are geographically concentrated in politically important areas.

About 40 percent of those jobs are in five states. Three of them are Ohio, and Michigan, which formed much of the backbone of Trump's 2016 election win and are seen as key to Republican fortunes in later this year.

The ripple effects, however, will be nationwide.

The profits of corporations that could be dented, causing them to hold back on the investments or wage increases the says would flow from lower corporate taxes. In an age when carbon fibre is used on airplane wings and like bicycles, raising the price of aluminium and may boost demand for substitutes or research into alternatives.

How it all shakes out, domestically and globally, is unpredictable, according to economists and other observers.

"Make no mistake, the risk of reaching 4 percent or more is real, and that will force the Fed to act much more aggressively in tightening monetary policy," said Bernard Baumohl, at the

"Given this business cycle is already long in the tooth, these are the kinds of policy blunders that could easily bring this expansion to quick end," Baumohl said.

The Fed may be able to suspend judgment for a while. The central is expected to raise interest rates at its policy meeting in March, and following the announcement investors do not seem to have changed their expectations for that to proceed.

But moving past that meeting, should become the mood of the day, the Fed's hope for a "soft-landing" era of full employment and on-target may instead become a choice of which bad outcome to tolerate - rising prices or higher unemployment.

"The real worry is that this marks a turning point in U. S. trade policy, away from bluster and brinkmanship towards actual protectionist measures. We have consistently warned that this would become more likely as the mid-term and approach," Andrew Kenningham, for Capital Economics, wrote on Friday. "If so, Trump may discover that, contrary to his tweet this morning, there are rarely any winners from trade wars."

(Reporting by in San Francisco and in Washington; Additional reporting by in Washington; Editing by Paul Simao)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, March 03 2018. 00:17 IST
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