88140
American farmers are losing sales as trading partners hit back with duties of their own.
American farmers are losing sales as trading partners hit back with duties of their own.

Fear of Ongoing Trade War Hampers Global Economy

Fears are deepening that the current outbreak of antagonism could drag down the rest of the world

Fear of Ongoing Trade War Hampers Global Economy

Only a few months ago, the global economy appeared to be humming, with all major nations growing in unison. Now, the world's fortunes are imperiled by an unfolding trade war.
As the Trump administration imposes tariffs on allies and rivals alike, provoking broad retaliation, global commerce is suffering disruption, flashing signs of strains that could hamper economic growth. The latest escalation came on Friday, when US President Donald Trump announced fresh tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods, prompting swift retribution from Beijing, Todayonline reported.
As the conflict broadens, shipments are slowing at ports and airfreight terminals around the world. Prices for crucial raw materials are rising. At factories from Germany to Mexico, orders are being cut and investments delayed. American farmers are losing sales as trading partners hit back with duties of their own.
Workers in a Canadian steel mill scrambled to recall rail cars headed to the United States border after Trump this month slapped tariffs on imported metals. A Seattle customer soon cancelled an order.
"The impact was felt immediately," said Jon Hobbs, president of AltaSteel in Edmonton. "The penny is really dropping now as to what this means to people's businesses."
The Trump administration portrays its confrontational stance as a means of forcing multinational companies to bring factory production back to American shores. Trump has described trade wars as "easy to win" while vowing to rebalance the US' trade deficits with major economies like China and Germany.

Outbreak of Antagonism
Trump's offensive may yet prove to be a negotiating tactic that threatens economic pain to force deals, rather than a move to a full-blown trade war. Americans appear to be better insulated than most from the consequences of trade hostilities. As a large economy in relatively strong shape, the United States can find domestic buyers for its goods and services when export opportunities shrink.
Even so, history has proved that trade wars are costly while escalating risks of broader hostilities. Fears are deepening that the current outbreak of antagonism could drag down the rest of the world.
Before most trade measures fully take effect, businesses are already grappling with the consequences—threats to their supplies, uncertainty over the terms of trade and gnawing fear about what comes next.
"Just talking about protectionism is causing trouble," said Marie Owens Thomsen, global chief economist at Indosuez Wealth Management in Geneva. "It's an existential risk to the world economy."

No Growth Airfreight
After two years of expansion, airfreight traffic was flat over the first three months of the year, according to the International Air Transport Association. Dips have been especially pronounced in Europe and Asia.
Container ships, the workhorses of global commerce, have seen no growth in freight since last fall in seasonally adjusted terms, according to a key index.
A gauge of world trade tracked by Oxford Economics, a research firm in London, recently registered its weakest showing since early 2017.
"Let us not understate the macroeconomic impact," the managing director of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde warned this past week about trade conflicts. "It would be serious, not only if the United States took action, but especially if other countries were to retaliate, notably those who would be most affected, such as Canada, Europe and Germany."
Threats to trade are emerging just as the global economy contends with other substantial challenges.
The Trump administration's decision to reinstate sanctions on Iran has lifted oil prices, adding pressure to importers worldwide. Europe's economy is weakening, with Germany—the continent's largest economy—especially vulnerable. Central banks in the United States and Europe are withdrawing the cheap money they sent coursing through the global financial system after the crisis of 2008, lifting borrowing costs.
The Trump administration has embroiled the United States in increasingly acrimonious conflicts with huge trading partners.
The United States last year imported more than $600 billion in goods and services from Canada and Mexico, the two other nations in the North American Free Trade Agreement—a deal Trump has threatened to blow up. Americans bought more than $500 billion in wares from China, and another $450 billion from the European Union. Collectively, that amounts to nearly two-thirds of all American imports.
"If you seriously disrupt any of these three, you're going to feel the effects," said Adam Slater, lead economist at Oxford Economics. "If you disrupt all three at once, you're going to feel it quite severely."

 

Short URL : https://goo.gl/esp7Q7
  1. https://goo.gl/tNh9Gx
  • https://goo.gl/PVnDhQ
  • https://goo.gl/MN8nXr
  • https://goo.gl/vs62pW
  • https://goo.gl/yMECSq

You can also read ...

India Hits Back at US With Tariffs
Responding to the US import tariffs on certain steel and...
Ministers Fired After Argentina Currency Collapse
Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri has replaced two cabinet...
Few Will Want to Invest in High-Risk North Korea
US President Donald Trump dangled the carrot of foreign...
Businesses in Gaza are cutting back production as a result of falling consumer demand, the prevailing financial sanctions, restricted access to goods and materials, and lack of freedom of movement.
Humanitarian, socioeconomic, political and security conditions...
ECB Running Out of Time
The European Central Bank and the lenders it oversees are...
Suez Canal is the fastest shipping route between Europe and Asia.
Egypt’s revenue from the Suez Canal for the 2017-2018...
Refugees now comprise about 20% of Jordan’s population.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait pledged $2.5...
South Korea Household Debt Growing Faster
South Korea’s household debt grew at the third-fastest pace in...

Add new comment

Read our comment policy before posting your viewpoints

Trending

Googleplus