Instead of punitive tariffs, US should focus on correcting its own domestic imbalances to shore up its economy
The ongoing trade dispute between the United States and China could reshape the world’s economic and financial landscape. But that’s not how it looked as recently as May, when a bilateral trade deal was almost within reach. The United States backed out at the 11th hour, and tensions have since flared, with the Donald Trump administration imposing tariffs on a wide range of Chinese exports, and China responding in kind.
With an unprecedented $600 billion (528.6 billion euros; £475 billion) worth of goods potentially affected, it is worth considering how useful tariffs really are for correcting current account imbalances, which is the US administration’s stated goal. Most economists view trade from a multilateral perspective, focusing on an economy’s overall balance with the rest of the world. And the US has been running overall trade deficits since 1976.
The US deficit peaked at 5.5 percent of GDP in 2006, but it usually has been around 3 percent of GDP. At $552 billion in 2017, it is the world’s largest deficit in absolute terms.
Deficits rise when a country spends more than it produces, which means they are rooted not so much in trade as in domestic savings and investment behavior. In the US, investment accounts for 21 percent of GDP, in keeping with the average across advanced economies (22 percent), whereas savings account for less than 19 percent, which is far below that of peer countries.
Savings rate trouble
The US savings rate reflects both public and private sector behavior. The personal savings rate was as low as 3 percent in the runup to the 2008 financial crisis, after which it edged up to 7 percent – a rate still far below that of the early 1990s.
The public sector has historically saved even less. The US has had a federal budget surplus in only five of the last 50 years, and it has maintained deficits averaging more than 4 percent of GDP since 2002. This year, the deficit has risen by 17 percent on the back of tax cuts and increased defense spending, further dampening public savings.
Underlying the low US savings rate is the dollar’s status as the main global reserve currency. The dollar’s dominance confers on the US what Valery Giscard D’Estaing, as French finance minister, famously dubbed an “exorbitant privilege”, insofar as it allows the US to finance its deficits with little external constraint, borrowing ever more from abroad while saving less at home.
That by the end of 2017 foreigners owned half of the $12 trillion worth of privately held US Treasury securities that are currently outstanding should make that clearer.
And as a multilateral perspective makes clear, the US current account deficit can be reduced only through structural reforms to address the imbalance between domestic savings and investment. Such reforms have become all the more urgent with the unchecked growth of entitlement spending and with US unilateralism on trade now testing global confidence in the dollar.
Notwithstanding these economic realities, the Trump administration has embraced a bilateral perspective. Its tariffs on Chinese exports are meant to improve the US trade balance vis-a-vis China specifically. But if the US imports less from China, it will simply import more from other countries. And, as the latest data suggest, its overall trade deficit will likely remain the same or grow even larger.
Effects of high tariffs
Worse still, tariffs come with far-reaching costs. As US economist Henry George observed 132 years ago, “What protection teaches us is to do to ourselves in time of peace what enemies seek to do to us in time of war.” In fact, history is filled with cases of high tariffs turning economic slumps into major depressions.
And even at a time of growth, the US administration’s tariffs will not just force its citizens to pay more for imports but they will also undermine US production by distorting business incentives and misallocating resources.
Moreover, tariffs are hard to reverse, because they breed special interests and invite retaliation. Despite their high long-term costs, tariffs are also addictive as a political device because they allow governments to offer short-term sweeteners instead of more difficult structural reforms. But even if politicians are willing to turn a blind eye to the risks of protectionism, markets will not, as evidenced by the volatility in US stock markets in October.
As for China, its adherence to the multilateral perspective on trade, along with structural reforms, has helped to reduce its external imbalance. Unlike the US, China has had very high savings and too little spending. But in the decade since the global financial crisis, it has introduced policies to narrow the urban-rural income gap and strengthen the social safety net, thereby boosting consumption and reducing savings.
Such reforms have brought China’s current account surplus down from nearly 10 percent to 1 percent of GDP over the past decade. In the first three quarters of this year, final consumption expenditures accounted for nearly 80 percent of Chinese GDP growth, reflecting the fact that the economy is increasingly driven by domestic demand. By actively reducing its external surplus, China has demonstrated that it is not a mercantilist power but rather a responsible global stakeholder pursuing balanced and sustainable long-term growth.
Structural reforms
Looking ahead, China should continue to pursue structural reforms in order to further open up its economy, not least by improving intellectual property rights protection and creating a level playing field for competition between domestic and foreign companies. Such goals are firmly in line with the objective of balanced, sustainable growth.
To be sure, China has been accused of merely paying lip service to openness, particularly by foreign investors who have found it difficult to enter the Chinese market. The real problem, however, is not a lack of commitment to reform, but rather administrative red tape, which domestic constituents also complain about. Recent measures, such as the “one stop, one trip, one paper” program in Zhejiang province, demonstrate that China is serious about improving the business environment for all.
Whether the multilateral perspective prevails over the bilateral approach will have significant consequences over the medium and long term. Obviously, the multilateral view offers a better understanding of trade imbalances than the bilateral perspective, just as structural reforms are a better alternative than tariffs.
At the end of the day, external imbalances can be addressed only by correcting domestic imbalances. Since China has embraced this principle, its economy will continue to become more balanced and sustainable, regardless of the path the US chooses.
Zhu Min, a former deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund, is chair of the National Institute of Financial Research at Tsinghua University, and Miao Yanliang, chief economist at China’s State Administration for Foreign Exchange, has been a member of the China Finance 40 Forum since 2015. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.
(China Daily European Weekly 12/21/2018 page9)