Friday, March 29, 2024

MEATY MATTERS: Trump’s trade winds blow cold

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It hasn’t taken long for the hawkish new United States President Donald Trump to throw several cats among the trade pigeons or doves if you prefer. 
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He wasted no time in signing an executive order to withdraw from the Trans Pacific Partnership, over which 12 countries had slaved for seven years, but now the participant that probably caused the most delay has acted to ensure it won’t happen at all.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wants to convince Trump to change his mind while Australia’s Malcolm Turnbull thinks it’s worth going for a TPP minus one.

Our new PM Bill English is more realistic than Abe and will probably look closely at the other option.

But lurking in the shadows is China, which will be very eager to take the prime position in Asia Pacific trade now the US has abdicated its role.

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) involving the 10 ASEAN members and six others including China, India and Japan offers a ready-made alternative.

TPP would have represented 40% of global GDP compared with RCEP’s 24% but the latter group covers 46% of the world’s population with greater potential for economic and trade growth.

However, the RCEP negotiations have not addressed protection of labour, human rights and the environment, which were part of TPP.

Nor do the disputes resolution procedures, which were such a contentious aspect of TPP, form part of RCEP.

Considering the violent anti-TPP protests that might not necessarily be a bad thing though, no doubt, the lack of labour protection and human rights will provoke objections if an RCEP agreement was about to be signed.

To me, the most surprising aspect of Trump’s presidency, apart from his election in the first place, is his resemblance to a mediaeval monarch or, given his wall-building ambitions, a Chinese emperor from the Quin and Han dynasties who built the wall to protect trade on the Silk Road.

He also seems to want to return to a simpler post-WWII world when separate countries traded real goods with each other without the troublesome confusion of design, assembly and fulfilment across borders to take advantage of differing skills, labour costs and tax structures.

He also wants to make America great again by returning it to the manufacture of heavily industrialised products requiring a large domestic workforce and raw materials without depending on computerisation for design and manufacture.

He also appears to ignore the irresistible movement of the world’s workforces away from manual labour.

Trump’s view is of a much more one-dimensional world in which nations knew who their friends and enemies were and trading between them was a simple proposition.

The frightening reality is, as president of the US, he can insist everybody else plays with his old steam engine instead of being prepared to play with their high-speed electric trains.

New Zealand is faced with a choice between keeping its head down and praying nothing blows up, using logic and diplomacy to deal with an unpredictable child, or confronting him directly. I suspect diplomacy will be the chosen option.

In the meantime, NZ has several trade challenges on its plate, all of which threaten established red meat access provisions with key trading partners. The largest product sector is beef into the US, which is currently subject to a 213,000 tonnes quota under World Trade Organisation rules.

Trump appears to have all types of imports in his sights and there is no guarantee he won’t decide to impose an import tariff on all red meat in contravention of WTO rules.

Taking a complaint to the WTO would be a lengthy process, as shown by the slow resolution of the Indonesian import ban, and a favourable decision would not result in an immediate resumption of trade.

Trump’s stated preference is for bilateral trade deals with a whole range of “partners”, which is a euphemistic term for co-signatory, because of the intention to achieve an unequal outcome that benefits only the US.

If, in the opinion of the stronger party, the partner fails to live up to American demands, 30 days’ notice of termination will be served.

Free trade agreements are supposed to benefit both parties equally but this fact seems to have escaped the new president.

Still, there will be some comfort from the time required to negotiate any sort of FTA, which means these will be impossible to conclude within the term of a Trump presidency.

Under WTO rules, NZ’s red meat and associated co-products to the US incur tariffs which amounted to $13 million in 2014, equivalent to less than 1% of $1.543 billion of total exports.

Most of this was frozen beef on which the maximum tariff rate of 26.4% would otherwise apply, totalling more than $300 million.

The stakes for this country are very high.

If Trump should decide to “protect” American farmers by ripping up WTO rules, the fallout would be enormous for all countries including the US but there would be an unholy mess while it was sorted out. 

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