What does the US-China trade war mean for Bangladesh?*****
|The Daily Star, July 14, 2018
Nazmul Ahasan is a member of the editorial team at The Daily Star।
Professor Shakhawat Ali Khan, a veteran journalism professor at Dhaka University, often invokes a Second World War-era story in his classes to make his students realise just how important international affairs is. When the war persisted, many Indians were faced with an increased price of some of their essential commodities. As they began to inquire, they were baffled to learn that the price hike was due to the war.
How could a war being fought in faraway places a farmer in India never heard of dictate the price of a material he very often used? “International affairs is more closely associated with your lives than you may have realised,” Professor Khan would go on to say.
The latest demonstration of this contention has been US President Donald Trump’s so-called trade war against his allies and foes which threatens to destabilise the global trade and order. And, unlike the previous global financial crisis, Trump’s war will have far-reaching consequences for Bangladesh’s trade and economy.
From a broader perspective, Trump’s trade policy has been consistent with his protectionist worldview. On the third day of his presidency, he effectively sank the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal, which would have given Vietnam, Bangladesh’s major trade competitor, a considerable advantage in the American market. In that sense, it was a good thing for us, but the war he is currently waging against China is harder to predict.
The first impact of the war was first felt in Bangladesh’s steel industry. For the last few months, the price of rod has significantly increased in the domestic market, threatening both the major public infrastructure projects—which the government wants hurriedly to make progress on in an election year—and the real estate market. With an unhappy response from the business community, the industry leaders came up with a number of reasons—the major one being, unsurprisingly, Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminium imports.
In response to Trump’s 25 percent tariff on USD 34 billion worth of Chinese exports, China placed a reciprocal tariff on American exports—including soybean and cotton—to China worth the same amount. In a bid to find some alternatives elsewhere, China has decided to lower or cancel tariff on thousands of goods from Bangladesh, India and three other countries.
It seems like good news for us, but since China is primarily looking for an alternative to American soybean, Bangladesh will not be able to cash in on the crisis, since we import soybean—that too mainly from the US—rather than export, but a declining American soybean price should greatly help our consumers.
The Trump administration is poised to impose an additional 10 percent tariff on USD 200 billion worth of Chinese goods—roughly half the total US import from the country—but it is still unclear how many alternatives, if any, to Chinese goods we will be able to provide American consumers with. One should note that the Chinese goods being targeted by the latest US tariffs do not include most Chinese-made clothing.
As tariffs on Chinese clothing would escalate price, America may lower existing tariffs on imports of clothing from Bangladesh and Vietnam. While this is unlikely, there’s a good case as to why American administration should do so.
According to an April study by Pew Research Center, Bangladesh and Vietnam’s clothes and shoes are subjected to disproportionately high rates of US taxes—the main exception to a common American practice of imposing low tariffs on large volume imports.
In fact, it is Bangladesh—followed by other low-income countries in South Asia—that is subjected to the highest US duties, equivalent to 15.2 percent of the total value of our exports to the country. Trump may want to end this unfair practice.
As long as Trump is up against China and other big countries, it is a zero-sum game for Bangladesh, but many in Bangladesh fear Trump’s protectionist approach wouldn’t be limited to big countries alone. What if, for instance, Trump imposes a blanket tariff on all RMG imports?
One of the major stated objectives of Trump’s trade war is cutting down America’s giant trade imbalance with China. He and his protectionist trade advisers seem to be upset about the fact that China has a trade surplus of over USD 350 billion with the US, and Trump wants it to be reduced by USD 200 billion. China, while rejecting the demand, quite correctly pointed out that the US’ current account deficit was because of its persistently low savings rate relative to investment—which ironically is credited for a strong US economy. If the Trump administration could somehow force China to reduce its trade surplus with America, Jim O’Neil, the former chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group, points out, the surplus would simply be shifted to countries like Bangladesh and Vietnam if the US fails to raise its savings rate concurrently.
But, since the trade war may prove politically damaging for the president in soybean- and cotton-producing red states, will Trump push too hard and too far? Mark Mobius, a well-respected American financial industry expert and investor, bets he will. “What I would buy now is those countries [that] are going to be exporting to the US instead of China—like Bangladesh, Turkey, Vietnam,” he recently told CNBC. “These are all big producers of garments and shoes and consumer goods.”