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Eakinomics: Biden’s
Trade Challenge
The Trump Administration’s bevy of tariffs, disdain for international institutions,
and trade war with China yielded little or no concrete benefits for the U.S.
worker. But it did leave the United States isolated and with diminished
influence on the future direction of the global economy. This fact was driven
home by the signing Sunday of the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) by 15 Asian countries, led by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations bloc
and joined by China, Japan, and others. The RCEP covers about one-third of
the world’s population and roughly a third of economic output.
The RCEP comes on the heels of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) signed by
Australia, Japan, and nine other countries in 2018; President Trump famously
withdrew the United States from the TPP immediately after being inaugurated.
So, there are now two trade agreements in the most rapidly growing region of
the global economy, with China and others providing the leadership to set the
rules, and the United States is…watching.
This is not sustainable, so the challenge for President-elect Biden is how to
re-engage in multilateral trade efforts. While the U.S. populace broadly
supports trade agreements and understands that they have – on average – been
a net benefit to the economy, Biden’s progressive wing and key union
supporters will stand in opposition. The good news is that there is a vehicle
for the debate. Trade Promotion Authority (TPA)
expires July 1, 2021. There should, and will, be an effort to re-authorize
TPA for the president – every president should have TPA – and this will be
natural ground on which to lay out a new strategy toward China, in
particular, and Europe and Asia, in general.
The cost of the Trump trade strategy is far greater than the tariff dollars,
the farm bailouts, the trade diverted, and other monetary measures. Its
greatest cost was to default on U.S. leadership opportunities and
obligations. It is now the Biden Administration’s job to recover.
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