General Studies Paper-2
Context
- As the global trade landscape undergoes seismic shifts and the President of the United States reintroduces aggressive tariffs— some reaching as high as 50% (framed as ‘reciprocal tariffs’) — the world has responded with strategic restraint.
Recent Tariffs by US
- Nearly all U.S. trading partners now face tariffs between 10% and 50%, with Asian countries averaging 22.1%.
- Countries like India face a 25% rate, plus potential penaltiesfor trading with Russia.
- Only China and Canada have retaliated. Most others have opted to negotiate or comply to preserve access to the US market, despite these provocations.
Strategic Motives Behind the Tariffs
- Reciprocity and Trade Deficit Reduction:USA has long criticized what it sees as unfair trade practices by US partners, including India, which he labeled the ‘Tariff King’.
- The tariffs are framed as ‘reciprocal’,aiming to match or exceed the duties imposed by other countries on US goods.
- The broader goal is to narrow America’s trade deficit,especially with countries like India, China, and Brazil.
- Pressure Tactics for Bilateral Trade Deals:The US is using tariffs as leverage to push countries into bilateral trade agreements that favor American interests.
- US moves are seen as part of a broader effort to reshape global trade from multilateralism to transactional bilateralism.
- Geopolitical Signaling:The US is asserting its geopolitical stance and pressuring allies to align with its foreign policy by penalizing countries that maintain energy or defense ties with Russia.
- Domestic Political Messaging:The tariffs serve as a domestic political tool, reinforcing Trump’s ‘America First’ narrative and appealing to voters concerned about job losses and manufacturing decline.
- Strategic Realignment of Global Supply Chains:The US is encouraging companies to shift supply chains away from China and other adversarial economies, with India caught in the crossfire due to its mixed strategic alignment.
- Tariffs are being used to incentivize reshoring and reduce dependence on foreign suppliers in critical sectors like electronics, pharmaceuticals, and defense.
Global Response & Impacts
- The World Trade Organization (WTO)has warned that these tariffs could lead to a 1.5% contraction in global merchandise trade in 2025.
- The WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism remains dysfunctional, leaving countries with limited recourse to challenge US actions.
- Some countries, including South Korea and the EU, have signed deals to lock in lower tariff rates and commit to U.S. investments.
- Indiahas called the tariffs ‘unfair and unjustified’, but has not retaliated.
- Economic Fallout:Global supply chains are being reconfigured, with disruptions in sectors like pharmaceuticals, electronics, and agriculture.
- The S&P 500 saw a sharp decline, losing over $5 trillion in market value in just days.
- The IMF and WTO have revised global growth forecasts downward.
Strategic Silence: Why the World Isn’t Panicking?
- Fear of Escalation:Retaliation risks further tariff hikes and potential exclusion from the US market.
- Many countries have made concessions, such as lowering tariffs on US goods or reforming domestic regulations, to avoid confrontation.
- WTO Paralysis:WTO’s Dispute Settlement Mechanism is effectively defunct due to the U.S. blocking judge appointments since 2019.
- It means countries cannot enforce rulings against the US, undermining the global trade rulebook.
- Economic Warning Signs: The IMF projects global growth to fall to 2.8% in 2025, down from 3.3%.
- The WTO warns that merchandise trade could shrink by 0.2%, nearly three percentage points lower than it would have been without recent policy shifts.
- Services trade is also expected to grow 4% slower than initial forecasts.
- Geopolitical Dependence:Many of America’s traditional allies in Europe and Asia rely on the US for security.
- NATO, for instance, has long allowed EU countries to prioritize welfare spending over defense. Trump’s push for higher NATO spending (2% of GDP, rising to 5% by 2035) heightened awareness of this dependency.
- Deep Integration of Global Supply Chains:. Today’s trade networks are interdependent, unlike the early 20th century. Many nations understand that raising import tariffs would increase costs for domestic consumers; disrupt access to foreign inputs; and weaken competitiveness of local firms.
- As a result, economic pragmatismappears to have prevailed over mercantilist retaliation.
- Legacy of Globalization: The post-1991 global order, after the collapse of the Soviet Unionand the rise of free-market capitalism, has fostered widespread prosperity through liberalized trade.
- Nations like Chinaemerged as major beneficiaries, integrating deeply into global markets.
- Even if institutions like the WTOare imperfect, they have helped moderate trade tensions.
Conclusion
- The world avoided a repeat of 1930s-style protectionism, despite Trump’s disruptive tactics. The absence of broad retaliation reflects a mature understanding of mutual gains from trade, even in geopolitically fraught times.