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Opinion | Why Trump tariffs 2.0 may well result in a G2 world

Trump’s proposed tariffs on US imports would drive inflation and squeeze middle powers, but is that all part of the plan?

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On November 9, 2017, US and Chinese presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping attend a business leaders’ event at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. If re-elected, Trump will erect a Fortress America of trade with new tariffs, weakening middle industrial powers like Germany and Japan and solidifying the centrality of a G2 – China and the US. Photo: AFP
A victory by Donald Trump in this year’s US presidential election would spell higher tariffs on American imports. It would accelerate the relocation of production from middle powers such as Germany and Japan to the United States, weakening their economies and solidifying the centrality of a G2 – China and the US – in the global economy.
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The inflationary pressure from higher tariffs would stop the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates. In the long run, as US trade dwindles, the dollar’s global role would decline.
Former US president Trump loves tariffs and has made them a central part of his political platform for years. He appears to believe the US became rich on the back of high tariffs a century ago and that the free trade that flourished after World War II has made the country poorer. He has spoken of imposing a 20 per cent tariff on all imports.
If re-elected, Trump would erect a Fortress America of trade. Parts and components made in Europe or Japan would be suspect, and those made in Canada or Mexico would be unlikely to fare any better. In 2016, “Make America Great Again” probably meant moving the country back by about three decades, but now it looks like it could regress to a century ago.
The most immediate impact would be on the world’s middle industrial and technology powers. They thrive because they can leverage global supply chains and the size of the Chinese and American markets to scale up and become more efficient. Fortress America would force them to relocate to the US to sell there.
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US restrictions are impeding their sales in the Chinese market and pushing China to become more technologically self-sufficient. Middle powers are being squeezed on both sides, with far-reaching consequences for their currencies and living standards.

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