Trade uncertainty to shave $1.2 trillion off global output: Study

Container trucks arrive at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California, on Aug 23, 2019. PHOTO: AFP

SAN FRANCISCO • Trade policy uncertainty driven by the Trump administration's escalating dispute with China will mean hundreds of billions of dollars in lost US output and as much as US$850 billion (S$1.18 trillion) lost globally through early next year, research published this week by the Federal Reserve suggests.

The Fed researchers analysed newspaper articles and corporate earnings calls to estimate trade policy uncertainty, finding that it has recently "shot up to levels not seen since the 1970s".

Other economists, notably Stanford University professor Nicholas Bloom and his colleagues, have documented a similar rise in uncertainty.

The Fed researchers then estimated the blow such uncertainty delivers to economic activity, as businesses pull back on investment and production. They concluded that globally and in the United States, its impact is around 1 per cent to GDP.

With United States GDP estimated at about US$20 trillion, and world GDP at about US$85 trillion, a 1 per cent impact would put the drag from trade uncertainty at about US$200 billion to US GDP, and US$850 billion to global GDP, according to Reuters calculations.

The estimates, the researchers said, are uncertain.

But they are notable in that they are among the first to quantify the large impact of US President Donald Trump's approach to trade deals, which he says put the US economy at a global disadvantage.

In an effort to win better trade terms, the Trump administration has jacked up tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Chinese imports and imposed or threatened to impose duties on imports from other trading partners, including Mexico and the European Union. China and other countries, in turn, have threatened or imposed their own tariffs on US goods.

Mr Trump has called on the Fed to slash US interest rates to support the economy and offset the effects of the trade war.

Fed policymakers for their part have said they will not let politics dictate interest-rate policy. But they have consistently called out the tariffs as detrimental to US growth. Fed chair Jerome Powell last month cited trade policy uncertainty as an important reason for the global economic slowdown and weak US manufacturing.

Chicago Fed president Charles Evans on Wednesday argued that increased trade tensions could slow US potential growth to 1.5 per cent a year, half what Mr Trump said his administration would deliver.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on September 07, 2019, with the headline Trade uncertainty to shave $1.2 trillion off global output: Study. Subscribe