Trump has vowed sweeping tariffs: What comes next?

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This will not be the first time Trump has used tariffs to exert pressure on other countries.

This will not be the first time Trump has used tariffs to exert pressure on other countries.

PHOTO: AFP

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WASHINGTON - US president-elect Donald Trump says “tariff” is the most beautiful word in the dictionary – and the Republican’s second term promises sweeping measures on all US$3 trillion (S$3.99 trillion) worth of US imported goods.

This will not be the first time Trump has used tariffs to exert pressure on other countries. What should households and businesses expect?

What did he pledge?

Trump has promised at least a 10 per cent tariff on all imports, and a higher level of

60 per cent or more on Chinese goods

– stepping up levies on Beijing and others.

The aim, he said, was to target countries that had been “ripping us off for years” and to lower US trade deficits.

Trump has also suggested tariffs above 200 per cent on vehicles from Mexico, saying this was to protect US auto firms.

In Pennsylvania this week, Trump threatened to take further aim at China and Mexico if they did not

stop deadly fentanyl

from entering the country.

Experts note, however, that when Washington imposes tariffs on imports, it is US businesses who pay the fees to the government.

Can he do it?

“The risk is significant,” said Mr Scott Lincicome, vice-president of general economics at the Cato Institute.

Laws exist that “allow the president to apply tariffs unilaterally for extremely broad and discretionary reasons”, he told AFP.

This includes national security justifications, he said, pointing to what the US government did when

imposing steel and aluminum tariffs in 2018.

Courts have also been “extremely reluctant to act as a check on that power”, Mr Lincicome added.

Experts have pointed to laws like the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which allows a president to declare a national emergency and restrict trade.

What are the consequences?

US consumers could lose US$46 billion to US$78 billion in spending power annually if new tariffs on imports are implemented, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF).

This applies if proposed tariffs were imposed on six product categories alone – apparel, toys, furniture, household appliances, footwear and travel goods.

“Retailers rely heavily on imported products and manufacturing components so that they can offer their customers a variety of products at affordable prices,” said Mr Jonathan Gold, NRF vice-president of supply chain and customs policy.

“This tax ultimately comes out of consumers’ pockets through higher prices,” he added.

For companies, uncertainty over US tariff regimes for their industries and retaliatory risks “will clearly be a huge problem when forward planning,” said Mr Ben May, director of global macro research at Oxford Economics.

How might countries respond?

When Washington slapped tariffs on €6.4 billion (S$9.1 billion) worth of European steel and aluminium exports in 2018, the EU retaliated with “rebalancing tariffs” on US exports – hitting a value of €2.8 billion.

These have since been suspended but both sides have struggled to finalise a longer-term solution.

When the first Trump administration announced tariffs on hundreds of billions of Chinese products between July 2018 and August 2019, Beijing retaliated with tariffs on more than US$185 billion of US products, the Brookings Institution noted.

Trump’s aggressive trade actions left the US farm industry suffering from China’s response, hitting soybeans especially hard with exports plunging.

The Trump administration paid out some US$28 billion in aid to farmers hit by the trade war’s consequences.

Is there recourse?

Across-the-board tariffs could violate US international trade obligations in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and with free trade area partners, said Mr Jeffrey Schott, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE).

While other countries can challenge US actions, Mr Schott noted that any dispute settlement process involving the US will hit a wall as it can appeal any adverse panel ruling and there is no appellate body to hear the case.

Countries would likely retaliate instead, said Mr Schott.

This could take the form of tariffs or other levers like regulatory approvals, the Cato Institute’s Lincicome said.

Foreign governments would likely try to strike deals with the Trump administration as well, he added.

He noted that the first Trump government started free trade agreement talks with Kenya and renegotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement.

But it is unclear if his new policymakers will be similarly inclined to trade deals. AFP

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