
Trump's trade victims are shrugging off his attacks
Yet by acting as if America remains the axis of world trade, Mr Trump may be accelerating its shift elsewhere. The world's biggest market is less central in global trade today than it once was. At the start of the century, America accounted for a fifth of global imports; today it makes up just an eighth. Even as countries strike tariff deals with Mr Trump to secure market access, they are drawing up alternatives. As one South Korean official puts it, 'The first step is to make concessions to America. The second is to look elsewhere.'
Chart
Around the world, governments are hedging against the end of the old economic order in different ways. Some are propping up local firms with subsidies and protectionism. Others are seeking new markets. And the boldest are forging alliances to counterbalance America's clout. The choice for many is not between deference to Washington or a Hobbesian state of nature, but between short-term fixes and longer-term alternatives.
Given Mr Trump's predilection for levies and the tendency for taxes to outlast their creator, handouts to trade-war victims risk wasting money and distorting markets. Brazil has unveiled a $6bn credit package, which includes tax holidays and state-purchasing guarantees. With public finances already strained, the plan spooked investors. Canada has taken a similar approach, pledging nearly $1bn to support its lumber industry. South Africa's trade ministry has proposed policies to let exporters co-ordinate on shipping costs and jointly build infrastructure, even if that means skirting antitrust rules.
Others are reaching for blunter tools. Canada and Japan are slapping new levies on metal imports. Meanwhile, India is doubling down on its 'Made in India' campaign. On August 15th Narendra Modi, the country's prime minister, extolled self-reliance in everything from energy to fighter jets. 'If we continue to be vocal for local, we will achieve prosperity,' he declared. Although so far there has not been much retaliation against Mr Trump, the risk is that copycat protectionism multiplies, raising costs for everyone.
Global is noble
More promising is the search for new markets. From Asia to Africa, governments are nudging companies abroad with export funds and incentives. Singapore and South Korea, for instance, are bankrolling small firms to scout out opportunities in South Asia, the Middle East and Mexico. Some are already redirecting trade. South African farmers are sending more produce to China and pushing the EU to relax its citrus-health rules. Lesotho's garment-makers—once geared to American firms like Gap and Levi's—are turning to regional buyers and testing demand in Asia. Brazil's coffee exporters, hit with a 50% American tariff, are stepping up shipments to North Africa and the Middle East, where sales volumes rose by three-fifths last year. Yet even with such diversification, replacing America, still the destination for 16% of Brazil's beans, will take time.
Most consequential are the new alliances. Canada and Mexico, America's two neighbours and partners in the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) are edging closer as America becomes less reliable. Next month Mark Carney, Canada's prime minister, will visit Mexico, where he is set to discuss supply-chain resilience, port-to-port trade and joint ventures in energy and artificial intelligence. With the USMCA trade pact up for review next year, the two countries are hoping to create leverage they can use against Mr Trump.
Many of the BRICS countries—a club of 11 emerging economies including Brazil, China, India, Russia and South Africa—have been targets of Mr Trump's ire, most recently with his levies of 50% on Brazil and India. In response, Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (known as Lula), has worked the phones to rally allies. On August 7th he and Mr Modi discussed closer ties, including digital-payments links that could chip away at the dominance of American banks. Four days later Lula spoke with Xi Jinping, China's leader, about deepening trade, after which Mr Xi declared relations with Brazil to be 'at their best in history'. When it comes to trade, the bloc is hardly beholden to America. Uncle Sam buys only a sixth of Indian goods and a seventh of Brazilian exports, the latter down from a quarter two decades ago. As a group, the BRICS members now trade more goods with one another than with America and the gap is widening. Integration is accelerating after Mr Trump's tariffs. Over a dozen countries, including Thailand and Vietnam, have sought partner-country status or applied to join.
The biggest winner from the new alliances may be China. Its exports to the global south have doubled since 2015—and it sells more to South and South-East Asia, Latin America and the Middle East than to America and western Europe. In July, even as exports to America collapsed, its overall exports grew by 7% from a year earlier. Mr Trump's tariffs have deepened these links. In June Mr Xi pledged to scrap nearly all duties on imports from Africa, and he is attending summits with Latin American and South-East Asian leaders. China and the Association of South-East Asian Nations—home to a quarter of the world's people and a fifth of its GDP—are revamping their free-trade deal, due to be ratified by the year's end. Relations with India, meanwhile, are thawing. Indian firms are exploring joint projects with Chinese counterparts in electric vehicles and batteries; this month Mr Modi is expected to visit China for the first time in seven years. Mr Trump wanted America at the centre of world trade. Things are not going to plan.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
2 minutes ago
- NDTV
"Everybody Feels Safe": Trump Visits Cops, Troops Deployed In Washington DC
Washington: President Donald Trump visited police and troops Thursday that he has deployed in the US capital in what he calls a crackdown on crime, saying they were going to "stay here for a while." Trump ordered hundreds of members of the Guard, a reserve force, to deploy in Washington last week vowing to "take our capital back," despite protests by some residents and statistics showing violent offenses falling. "We're going to make it safe, and we're going to then go on to other places, but we're going to stay here for a while. We want to make this absolutely perfect," the Republican said outside a US Park Police facility in the Anacostia neighborhood of Washington. He was surrounded by law enforcement from various local and federal agencies as well as National Guard troops. Earlier Thursday the 79-year-old had suggested he would go on patrol with police and the military, but instead he made a short speech and gave out pizzas and hamburgers. "Everybody feels safe," he said, adding that he plans to get the capital "fixed up physically." "One of the things we're going to be redoing is your parks. I'm very good at grass, because I have a lot of golf courses all over the place. I know more about grass than any human being," the billionaire added. He spoke one day after his vice president, JD Vance, was greeted by boos and shouts of "Free DC" -- referring to Washington's formal name, the District of Columbia -- on his own meet-and-greet with troops. Vance dismissed the hecklers as "a bunch of crazy protesters." The DC National Guard has mobilized 800 troops, while Republican states Ohio, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia are sending a total of around 1,200. They have been spotted in tourist areas such as the National Mall and its monuments, the Nationals Park baseball stadium and others. The overwhelmingly Democratic US capital faces allegations from Republican politicians that it is overrun by crime, plagued by homelessness and financially mismanaged. But data from Washington police showed significant drops in violent crime between 2023 and 2024, though that was coming off the back of a post-pandemic surge. Some residents have welcomed the crackdown, pointing to crime in their areas -- but others have complained the show of force is unnecessary, or has not been seen in parts of Washington where violence is concentrated. - Sandwich guy - Several incidents involving the surge of law enforcement have gone viral as residents voice their discontent, including the arrest of one man who was caught on camera throwing a sandwich at an agent. Banksy-style posters honoring the so-called "sandwich guy" have popped up around the city. The National Guard troops have provided "critical support such as crowd management, presence patrols and perimeter control in support of law enforcement," according to statements on their official X account. In addition to sending troops into the streets, Trump has also sought to take full control of the Washington police department, attempting at one point to sideline its leadership. The deployment of troops in Washington comes after Trump dispatched the National Guard and Marines to quell unrest in Los Angeles, California, that was sparked by immigration enforcement raids.


India Today
2 minutes ago
- India Today
Endangering American lives: US pauses foreign trucker visas after fatal crash
The United States has immediately paused the issuance of all worker visas for commercial truck drivers, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced Thursday, citing public safety concerns and the need to protect American jobs.'The increasing number of foreign drivers operating large tractor-trailer trucks on US roads is endangering American lives and undercutting the livelihoods of American truckers,' Rubio said in a post on move follows a series of steps by President Donald Trump's administration to tighten enforcement of rules governing foreign truck drivers. In April, Trump signed an executive order directing authorities to enforce a long-standing requirement that commercial drivers in the US meet English-proficiency standards. That order reversed a 2016 directive that had allowed inspectors to overlook English violations as the sole reason to remove a driver from service. Concerns over the issue escalated this week after a deadly crash in Florida involving a foreign truck driver. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has opened an investigation into the incident, which killed three said the driver, Harjinder Singh, an Indian national, did not speak English and lacked legal authorization to work in the United States. Singh was accused of attempting an illegal U-turn through an 'Official Use Only' access point, triggering a collision that killed three occupants of a minivan. He has been charged with three counts of vehicular homicide and has been returned to Florida from California to face warned that the failure to enforce driver qualification standards 'poses serious safety concerns and increases the likelihood of crashes.'- EndsTune InMust Watch


India.com
2 minutes ago
- India.com
Why Chinese Media Say India Has Now Realised The Need For Friendship With Beijing
New Delhi: China's state-run press has placed unusual focus on Foreign Minister Wang Yi's recent visit to New Delhi. For Beijing's news outlets, the trip signalled a shift in India's strategic posture at a time when U.S. tariffs are beginning to bite. During his two-day stay, Wang Yi held wide-ranging talks with Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval on the border situation. He also met External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Reports in Chinese media framed the visit as part of India's recalibration, suggesting that stronger ties with Beijing would benefit the Global South (a grouping of developing nations across Asia, Africa and Latin America). Add Zee News as a Preferred Source The Chinese foreign ministry later confirmed that the two sides agreed to restart regular dialogue mechanisms, expand cooperation, resist unilateral pressure from third countries and maintain calm along the boundary. State-run Global Times highlighted this consensus, stating that 'stability and peace' in the border areas had been reaffirmed. Some Indian media outlets claimed China had relaxed controls on rare earth exports to India. Asked about this, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said she was 'not aware of such a move' but added that Beijing sought uninterrupted supply chains and closer cooperation with partner economies. The Hindustan Times recently reported that China accounts for nearly 30 per cent of India's fertiliser imports, besides supplying rare earths for automobile components and tunnel-boring machines for infrastructure projects. Despite positive optics, official readouts from both capitals diverged on key issues. Beijing's statement claimed Jaishankar had acknowledged Taiwan as part of China. But India's foreign ministry clarified that New Delhi's position on Taiwan remained unchanged and that its economic, cultural and technological ties with Taipei would continue. On terrorism, India's official note said New Delhi strongly raised the issue with Wang Yi, recalling the SCO's founding objective of countering extremism. The Chinese release, however, made no reference to terrorism. Similarly, India flagged environmental concerns over China's planned mega dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), stressing the need for transparency. This too was absent in Beijing's version. Chinese editorials have framed the visit as a step towards 'strategic space' for India. The China Daily wrote that New Delhi had little choice but to reassess its options after Washington doubled tariffs on Indian goods, despite India's alignment with the United States on several global issues. The paper argued that India's refusal to halt Russian oil imports further exposed its friction with American policy, pushing it to hedge by engaging China. The Global Times carried a similar theme, suggesting India's heavy dependence on the U.S. export market had become a vulnerability under rising tariffs, while Asian partnerships offered a safer alternative. Nationalist commentary platforms went further. A website, Guancha, quoted Fudan University scholar Lin Minwang as saying that closer ties with China could strengthen India's bargaining position with Washington. He also stressed that Beijing would never compromise on matters linked to core national interests. Wang Yi's visit, therefore, was more than a routine diplomatic stop. For Beijing, it was a moment to underline the potential of an India-China reset, driven as much by global economics as by shifting geopolitics.