How Trump tariffs on China and Mexico could hurt US economy

AP  |  Washington 

Ten billion here, ten billion there: Donald Trump's escalating tariffs on imports to the have begun to amount to serious money and potentially to imperil one of the most resilient economies in American history.

Until now, the economy has largely shrugged off damage from Trump's trade wars.

Even as the self-proclaimed Man piled import taxes on everything from Turkish to Canadian aluminum to Chinese burglar alarms, the job market has remained sturdy.

At 3.6%, the unemployment rate is at its lowest point in a half-century. In July, the expansion that followed the Great Recession will become the longest on records dating to 1854.

But over the past month, Trump has made a higher-stakes gamble on the economy's durability. He's more than doubled tariffs on USD200 billion in Chinese imports. He's preparing to tax an additional USD300 billion in goods from China, extending his import taxes to everything sells to the

And in a move that alarmed some of his own advisers and caught investors by surprise, Trump said he would impose a 5% tax on Mexican imports starting Monday a tax that would reach 25% by Oct. 1 if the fails to stop a flow of Central American migrants into the

Combined, the actions mark a broad escalation of Trump's trade wars. The new tariffs on Chinese and Mexican imports amount to potentially USD 190 billion a year in new taxes paid by US importers and typically passed on to consumers.

For American households, this means higher prices on fruits and vegetables, autos, electronic components and other necessities. What's more, exporters, especially farmers, can expect to suffer retaliation when and hit back with tariffs or other sanctions on exports from the US.

The tariffs inflict other damage that is harder to measure. They generate uncertainty for American businesses over where to buy supplies, sell goods or situate factories and offices. And they rattle investors and undercut consumer and business confidence.

Researchers at calculate that a 25% on all Chinese imports would shave a full percentage point from U.S. growth over the next year. The economy grew 2.9% in 2018 and will likely be weaker for 2019. Add a 25% tax on Mexican goods, they say, and the United States could tumble into recession for the first time since 2009.

The Federal Reserve has taken notice. made clear this week that the Fed is prepared intervene, likely by lowering interest rates, if the trade wars were deemed to threaten the expansion.

Still, it's far from sure that Trump's trade conflicts, even if they escalate, will imperil the economy.

Pinelopi Goldberg of the World Bank, and economists of UCLA, of the University of California, Berkeley, and of Columbia University, calculated that the economic loss from the trade wars last year amounted a minuscule 0.04% of the broadest gauge of economic output. (Their figure doesn't include the latest threats.)

One reason is that trade accounts for a surprisingly small portion of the economy. Exports and imports combined equal just 27% of U.S. GDP, the calculates. The share is lower in only seven other countries, none of them an industrial power like the US.

Yet despite its modest economic role, trade punches above its weight in American political discourse.

Consider the revamped version of the politically contentious North American Free Trade Agreement that the US negotiated last year with and Mexico, one of Trump's policy achievements. Trump said the new pact the US-Mexico-Agreement would create jobs and restore America's status as "a manufacturing powerhouse" by drawing factories back to the US from low-wage

But the independent analysed the new agreement and concluded that it would boost the economy by just USD68 billion and add 176,000 jobs over six years negligible gains in a USD21 trillion economy and a job market exceeding 150 million people.

Likewise, said Jason Furman, who served as of Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, "to date most of (Trump's) trade war has been too small to have a large aggregate economic impact."

That said, Furman warned that if the tariffs were extended to all products and if tariffs were also imposed on Mexico, "we could start to actually see the trade war in jobs, GDP and other aspects of the economy."

Furman, who is now at the Harvard Kennedy School, said he doubts the new tariffs would "tip the United States economy into recession ... but they would certainly help push it in that direction."

For months, businesses and investors have largely convinced themselves that Trump would deploy his tariffs only temporarily, as leverage to pry concessions from China, and others. And just over a month ago, it looked as if the US and were nearing a resolution in their conflict over Beijing's aggressive push to overtake American technological dominance. But negotiations collapsed and Trump ramped up tariffs after the US side accused of reneging on commitments made earlier in the negotiations.

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

First Published: Fri, June 07 2019. 02:50 IST