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Arvind Subramanian: From Financial Folly to Trade Troubles?
Global protectionism is a risk if dollar appreciates
Arvind Subramanian / New Delhi December 24, 2008, 0:15 IST

 
 
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The risk of worldwide protectionism looms, especially if the dollar appreciates.

If 2008 was the year of finance, 2009 could well be the year of trade. If 2008 was dominated by commodity prices (which soared in the first half) and equity prices (which collapsed in the second), events in 2009 will be influenced by the fortunes of currency prices, especially the dollar.

As the grim excesses of the financial sector have begun taking a toll on the real sector, the nascent signs of emerging trade protectionism are unmistakable. The skirmishes have begun and the theatre is global—some form of trade restrictive measure has been imposed or is being seriously contemplated in the US, EU, Brazil, Russia, Indonesia, and yes, India too. Whether skirmish turns to serious battle will depend to a great extent on the movement of the dollar and US-China economic relations.

Since the onset of the financial crisis, and despite the US being at the epicentre of the financial crisis, the dollar has appreciated against the major currencies. If the dollar remains at this level or appreciates further, trade frictions will almost certainly escalate. A strengthening dollar is bad news for freer trade on two counts. On the macroeconomic side, a strong dollar will add to recessionary pressures in the US. With consumption and investment collapsing, net exports and government remain the two sources of boosting demand. But a rising dollar will serve to reduce net exports, placing all the burden on the fiscal stimulus package to prevent the US economy from sinking further into recession.

On the political side, a rising dollar will fuel protectionist pressures in the US as the manufacturing sector faces heightened competition from abroad. This combination of recession and strengthening currency significantly increases the risks of trade protectionism. It is often forgotten that the most serious outbreak of protectionism in the US happened in the 1980s because this combination of factors made even Ronald Reagan, the champion of free markets and free trade, give in to protectionist pressures and enact a series of trade restrictive measures, directed largely at the country that was then considered the competitive threat — Japan.

In the current circumstances, protectionist pressures will find a less unsympathetic ear in a Democratic administration and Congress which have placed middle class concerns as front and centre for policy action. And it is no secret that one key source of middle class concern is a growing anxiety about globalization.

If the theatre of conflict in the 1980s pitted the US against Japan, this time it will see the US in a face-off with today’s hyper-competitive economy, China because of the latter’s exchange rate policies. To be sure, the Chinese yuan has appreciated by about 10 percent since the crisis because of its umbilical association with the rising dollar but also because the currencies of China’s competitors—Korea, Brazil, Mexico, and India—have declined substantially. China can therefore legitimately claim that it has “moved” on rectifying its undervalued currency. But the level of the undervaluation, by most calculations, remains substantial, and its trade surplus shows little sign of dramatic change, so the Chinese currency will remain a bone of contention. China taking any action to stop or reverse this ongoing process of currency correction, in response to its own economic downturn for example, could be the spark that makes a serious trade confrontation more likely.

What are the consequences for India? On trade, Indian policymakers and the Indian private sector have operated until recently under the assumption that markets in the major industrial countries, including the US, will remain open regardless of what India does. Indian willingness to let the Doha round collapse, even if it meant being vulnerable to the charge of being a recalcitrant trading partner, was simply a manifestation of this sanguine calculation. And this calculation was reasonable because there was never a serious risk that restrictions could be placed on India’s software or textile exports.

If, however, recession grips the world and the dollar appreciates, India will be forced to re-visit that assumption. Now, there is a possibility of India’s export markets—and indeed those of all emerging markets—becoming less open, and hence undermining Indian growth prospects. A corollary is that India and other emerging markets may have to contribute to keeping those markets open which may have to take the form of offering to open up India’s markets. The days of India setting its trade policies unilaterally without some assessment of its impact of the global trading system or some consideration of the demands of its trading partners may be numbered. Put differently, the globalization of India’s trade cannot co-exist for much longer without the globalization of India’s trade policies.

This financial crisis, bad as it is and worse as it is likely to get, will still not approach the calamitous proportions of the crisis of the 1930s. An important reason is that policymakers have learnt what to do and what not to do in such perilous times. A good illustration relates to the fiscal and monetary policy response. In the US, the new government has signalled its willingness to spend enormous sums of public money, even at the risk of impairing sovereign balance sheets to limit the economic downturn. And Central Bankers, especially the US Fed Chairman, have thrown caution to the winds and embarked on a Mugabe-esque course of “debauching the currency” to use Lenin’s famous phrase because of their belief that such actions are needed to avoid a repeat of the 1930s.

But the 1930s saga involved not just the sin of omission on macroeconomic policies (when the US Fed stood watching as credit and the banking system collapsed) but also the sin of commission on trade policies. Trade protectionism, initiated in the US by the infamous Smoot-Hawley legislation, and the imitation it begat in Europe, also contributed substantially to the vicious downward spiral in world trade and economic activity that created the Great Depression.

Now, not just industrial countries but also emerging markets such as India have a serious responsibility to work to ensure that global markets remain open. A new cooperative enterprise on trade is urgently needed. Its name is …well, let’s just say it is not Doha.

The author is Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics and Center for Global Development, and Senior Research Professor Johns Hopkins University

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