logo
THE ECONOMIST: Ship happens — supply chains reroute as nations push back on Donald Trump's trade tariff war

THE ECONOMIST: Ship happens — supply chains reroute as nations push back on Donald Trump's trade tariff war

West Australian17 hours ago
The 'Trump Round' of trade negotiations, as Jamieson Greer, America's trade representative, calls it, was meant to reassert American primacy.
Peter Navarro, a longtime adviser to Donald Trump, even suggested that the president deserved a Nobel prize in economics for showing how the world's biggest market can bend global commerce to its will. The White House's bet is that dismantling the old order, once policed — however fitfully — by the World Trade Organisation, will usher in a new one with America at its centre.
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.'
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 $US6 billion ($9.2b) 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 $US1b ($1.5b) 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 15 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 per cent 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 per cent 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 per cent 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 7 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 per cent 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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump says Ukraine must take the fight to Russia to survive, as Zelensky prepares for possible Putin meeting
Donald Trump says Ukraine must take the fight to Russia to survive, as Zelensky prepares for possible Putin meeting

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

Donald Trump says Ukraine must take the fight to Russia to survive, as Zelensky prepares for possible Putin meeting

US President Donald Trump has said Ukraine must start launching direct strikes inside Russia if it has any hope of winning the war, warning that Kyiv's hands have been tied by weak Western leadership. 'It is very hard, if not impossible, to win a war without attacking an invader's country,' Mr Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. 'It's like a great team in sports that has a fantastic defence, but is not allowed to play offence. There is no chance of winning! It is like that with Ukraine and Russia.' The president accompanied his message with two photos - one showing him pointing at Russian President Vladimir Putin during their meeting in Alaska last week, and another of Richard Nixon confronting Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. Mr Trump again placed blame on his predecessor Joe Biden for allowing the conflict to erupt, saying the former president 'would not let Ukraine FIGHT BACK, only DEFEND'. Asked to clarify Mr Trump's position, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said: 'The president is making an observation, which happens to be true.' Mr Trump's comments follow a shift among Western allies, with the US, UK and Germany recently lifting restrictions on Ukraine using Western weapons to strike targets inside Russia. However, Washington has so far withheld advanced weaponry such as Tomahawk missiles. The remarks come as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he is prepared to meet Vladimir Putin, but only after Western powers commit to concrete security guarantees to protect Ukraine from future aggression. 'We want to have an understanding of the security guarantees architecture within seven to 10 days,' Mr Zelensky said in comments released on Thursday. 'We need to understand which country will be ready to do what at each specific moment.' He said any such summit with Mr Putin must take place in a neutral European country, ruling out Moscow as a venue. Mr Zelensky also rejected any role for China, citing Beijing's support for Moscow throughout the war. Ukraine has also announced the successful test of a new long-range missile called Flamingo, capable of striking targets up to 3000 kilometres away. 'The missile has undergone successful tests. It is currently our most successful missile,' Mr Zelensky told reporters. But while diplomacy is underway, the conflict on the ground is escalating. Russia launched its largest barrage of missiles and drones since mid-July, killing at least one person in the western city of Lviv and injuring dozens more. Ukrainian officials also said a US-owned industrial complex in the town of Mukachevo was directly targeted. Nineteen people were wounded in that strike, according to Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko, who posted on social media. France condemned the missile strikes, calling them the most intense assault in a month and proof that Moscow has no genuine interest in pursuing peace. A separate Russian shelling of Kherson later in the day killed one person and wounded more than a dozen. On the battlefield, Russia claimed to have captured the village of Oleksandro-Shultyne in Donetsk, a region that has seen some of the fiercest fighting of the war. The village lies just eight kilometres from Kostiantynivka, a heavily fortified Ukrainian town. Ukrainian forces said Russia is continuing to build up troops along the southern front in the Zaporizhzhia region, one of five areas Moscow claims to have annexed. Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Ukraine of making unrealistic demands over the proposed post-war security guarantees, warning that any deployment of European troops in Ukraine would be 'absolutely unacceptable'. 'The rhetoric of the Ukrainian officials was directly showing that they are not interested in a sustainable, fair, long-term settlement,' Mr Lavrov said. Despite his repeated calls for a peace deal, Mr Trump has made no secret of his belief that Ukraine must take a harder military stance if it wants to survive. Mr Zelensky has said the war can only end through direct dialogue with the Russian leader, and that he wants Mr Trump present when that meeting happens. But Moscow has so far shown little enthusiasm for a summit with the Ukrainian president.

‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia
‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia

Sydney Morning Herald

timean hour ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia

London: US President Donald Trump has slammed American policies that prevented Ukraine from launching full-scale attacks on Russia in order to win the war, posting a picture of himself pointing at the chest of Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to reinforce his point. Trump suggested Ukraine should have been able to fight with few restrictions over more than three years of war, in a startling post during a period of sensitive negotiations over a peace deal. He also drew a direct parallel with assertive American policy against Russia during the Cold War by adding a photograph of then US vice-president Richard Nixon pointing his finger at the chest of then Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1959. Russia bombarded Ukrainian cities with more missile and drone attacks in the early hours of Thursday, local time, despite calls from European leaders for a ceasefire so that the US, Ukraine and Russia could negotiate a settlement to the war. The latest bombings included a strike against an American electronics plant in Ukraine, prompting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to cite this as proof of a deliberate Russian attack on US interests. Ukraine estimates that Russia has fired nearly 1000 long-range drones and missiles at Ukraine since talks on Monday when Zelensky and European leaders spoke with Trump for hours at the White House. Former US President Joe Biden placed restrictions on the way Ukraine could use some of the arms supplied since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, such as preventing long-range artillery being fired at targets on Russian soil.

‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia
‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia

The Age

timean hour ago

  • The Age

‘Fight back': Trump airs support for Ukraine going on offensive against Russia

London: US President Donald Trump has slammed American policies that prevented Ukraine from launching full-scale attacks on Russia in order to win the war, posting a picture of himself pointing at the chest of Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to reinforce his point. Trump suggested Ukraine should have been able to fight with few restrictions over more than three years of war, in a startling post during a period of sensitive negotiations over a peace deal. He also drew a direct parallel with assertive American policy against Russia during the Cold War by adding a photograph of then US vice-president Richard Nixon pointing his finger at the chest of then Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1959. Russia bombarded Ukrainian cities with more missile and drone attacks in the early hours of Thursday, local time, despite calls from European leaders for a ceasefire so that the US, Ukraine and Russia could negotiate a settlement to the war. The latest bombings included a strike against an American electronics plant in Ukraine, prompting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to cite this as proof of a deliberate Russian attack on US interests. Ukraine estimates that Russia has fired nearly 1000 long-range drones and missiles at Ukraine since talks on Monday when Zelensky and European leaders spoke with Trump for hours at the White House. Former US President Joe Biden placed restrictions on the way Ukraine could use some of the arms supplied since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, such as preventing long-range artillery being fired at targets on Russian soil.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store