The Unpredictable Trade Warrior

11.10.2019

"Der Standard": WIFO Commentary by Fritz Breuss and Elisabeth Christen

In their WIFO guest commentary in the daily newspaper "Der Standard" of 10 October 2019, Fritz Breuss and Elisabeth Christen show that trade conflicts are not new: but under US President Donald Trump small trade wars become global.

In their WIFO guest commentary in the daily newspaper "Der Standard" of 10 October 2019, Fritz Breuss and Elisabeth Christen show that trade conflicts are not new: but under US President Donald Trump small trade wars become global.

According to Breuss and Christen, the "deal maker" Donald Trump believes he can make trade policy like real estate deals. He doesn't care about the grown world trade order.

US President Donald Trump abhors multilateralism, which is why he is very sceptical about the WTO and the EU. Under the slogan "America first", his preference is for bilateralism. He wants to conclude agreements with only one partner.

Despite Trump's contempt for the WTO, he benefits from it right now. According to the decision of the WTO Dispute Settlement Body of 2 October 2019 in the dispute over subsidies for Airbus, the USA is allowed to impose customs duties on EU imports worth 7.5 billion €. In a few months' time, the WTO is likely to grant the EU similar penalties in the Boeing dispute. An initial statement by the European Commission therefore recommends that instead of fighting each other with punitive tariffs, an agreement be concluded to reduce subsidies.

The full commentary (in German) can be found here.
 

Publications

Studies, August 2019, 36 pages
Online since: 12.08.2019 0:00
 
Trump's trade wars hit a new dimension expanding from mini to global trade wars. They target sectors (e.g., aluminium and steel) for the protection of "national security" (according to Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962) and countries (e.g., China) for unfair trade practices (according to Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974). Both legal instruments give the US President the power to impose sanctions and protective measures. Since Trump came in office, he has cancelled most multilateral agreements or projects the USA were previously involved (TTIP, TPP, NAFTA, Paris Climate Agreement, JCPoA). Whereas the US trade conflict with China escalated dramatically and could ultimately – beginning with 1 September 2019 as President Trump has threatened – affect all bilateral trade flows, the tensions with the EU are currently limited to aluminium and steel. However, a trade war with respect to cars could follow if no agreement on an US-EU FTA-light is reached, besides the agreement on increasing the share of duty-free imports of hormone-free beef from the USA, signed on 2 August 2019. We analyse the trade wars already underway (aluminium and steel; USA–China) and possible new conflicts (cars) and agreements (FTA-light) with two methods: 1. a static CGE model and 2. a global dynamic economic macro model. The comprehensive US trade war with China results in the biggest impact for the involved countries, followed by a possible car conflict and an FTA-light agreement.
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Mag. Elisabeth Christen, PhD

Research groups: Industrial, Innovation and International Economics
© History in HD/Unsplash
© History in HD/Unsplash