Donald Trump
Donald
Trump has a love/hate relationship with sanctions and trade wars. He flipflops
on Russian sanctions faster than a short order cook making pancakes. He
resisted applying Congressionally-approved sanctions against Russia for their
illegal annexation of Crimea and military occupation of eastern Ukraine, railed
against sanctions against Russian meddling in the 2016 election (a reality
which taints his victory) but was quick to OK sanctions against the use of
internationally banned nerve agents to take out former Russian espionage agent
in England.
Recep Erdogan and Vladimir
Putin
Bowing
to evangelical pressure to force the release of an American missionary in
Turkey accused of spying and engaging in terrorism, false charges perhaps,
Trump was quick to impose economic sanctions on Turkey in response. Turkey’s
already over-leveraged economy, with its currency down by almost 40% against
the U.S. dollar, tanked a further 12-13% after the U.S. move. Recep Erdogan,
Turkey’s strongman president, immediately made strong entreaties to Russia and
hinted about reducing or even eliminating Turkey’s role as a NATO member.
Trump
probably could have effected the Presbyterian Pastor
Andrew Brunson’s release through some standard back-channeling, but the
President exploded with his economic attack… bully tactics Trump adores.
Erdogan immediately used Trump’s onslaught to rally his nation around him,
quickly blaming the United States for all that is wrong with his country’s
completely mismanaged economy. That too many American banks had major exposure
against Turkey’s credit woes serious dropped the share value of many U.S.
financial institutions almost immediately. The U.S. stock market plunged.
Meanwhile,
Trump’s trade war with China has escalated. That China has built so much of its
economic progress based on pilfered access and use of patented American
technology is a terrible secret. China’s hacking of American governmental and
corporate data servers has been monumental, even if most of the hacking
scandals have centered around Russia – perhaps because of their dramatic impact
on our political system – with a bit of attention placed on North Korean
efforts. But in hard dollars, the Chinese efforts have been the most costly to
the United States.
Xi Jinping
As
Trump drills down on China, the trade war has devolved into PRC bureaucratic
efforts to make the import of U.S. goods and services much more difficult
(noting, for example, that agricultural goods delayed eventually rot and become
worthless). China just does not import enough U.S. goods for tariff increases
to matter than much. But China’s pledge to surpass the United States as the
global technology leader by 2025 is not without obvious irony, since so much of
China’s technical ability is based on purloined U.S. tech. There can be no
doubt that Mr. Trump’s castigation of China’s industrial espionage practices,
their requirement of information-sharing when U.S. companies want access to the
PRC marketplace, is valid. But it equally clear that in mounting trade wars,
especially as they related to higher tariffs and other trade barriers, there
are never any winners.
When
you combine (a) the hit on U.S. financial institutions because of our making a
bad situation in Turkey worse with (b) the escalating trade sanctions with
China and much of the rest of the world, we seem to be inching ever-closer to a
global recession, one that will slam the United States really hard hard. Both
China and the United States are claiming that each can outlast the other.
Behind the scenes, Republicans are panicking, knowing that a recession would
kill them at the polls, while tough-guy China, particularly President Xi
Jinping, is beginning to show some underlying weakness as well.
“If
the trade war escalates — and Mr. Trump has shown no sign of backing down —
some worry that the public’s faith in the economy could be shaken, exposing the
nation to much more serious problems than a drop in exports. New economic data
on Tuesday [8/14] showed slower growth in investment and consumer spending, and
there are fears that the financial crisis in Turkey could spread.
“China’s
leaders have argued that they can outlast Mr. Trump in a trade standoff. Their
authoritarian system can stifle dissent and quickly redirect resources, and
they expect Washington to be gridlocked and come under pressure from voters
feeling the pain of trade disruptions.
“But
the Communist Party is vulnerable in its own way. It needs growth to justify
its monopoly on power and is obsessed with preventing social instability. Mr.
Xi’s strongman grip may be hindering effective policymaking, as officials fail
to pass on bad news, defer decisions to him and rigidly carry out his orders,
for better or worse.
“Beijing
has already had to shift course once, edging away from threats to match
American tariffs dollar for dollar. Confronting
the possibility that the tariffs may remain for months or years and
that Chinese access to the American market could tighten further, Mr. Xi does not
appear to have settled on a strategy for limiting the damage or for persuading
Mr. Trump to negotiate a deal.
“Some
inside the government have argued China should be more aggressive and put Mr.
Trump on the defensive, while others have proposed concessions to address American
complaints, said Chen Dingding, a professor of international relations at Jinan
University in the southern city of Guangzhou… He said the debate was ‘a healthy
development’ because it would ‘inform the public and make policymakers better.’…
Others said it reflects indecision or political weakness on the part of Mr. Xi,
who seemed unassailable in March when the Communist leadership abolished the presidential term limit.”
New York Times, August 14th.
China
has faced quality control embarrassments on tainted products and has watched
the trade war drop its currency by 9% against the U.S. dollar. But in the
United States, as the trade disputes continue with no sign of abatement,
business confidence measures are plunging. Whatever minor uptick that might
have spurred share prices after the massive GOP-corporate tax give-away are now
long gone. Reality at what Donald Trump really means to the U.S. economy is
finally taking hold.
I’m Peter Dekom, and I fear that the
United States could easily learn a powerful lesson that no one benefits from a
trade war… even if other nations suffer as well.
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