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Trump allies forecast to bear brunt of protectionist policies

Donald Trump has repeatedly promised to take on China and its trade practices. But according to a new study it is US allies in Asia and Europe that are set to bear the burden of a new wave of US protectionism shaping up to be the largest seen in decades. The study released yesterday by a leading expert on trade disputes and protectionism comes as US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross hurries to deliver within days a plan to impose new restrictions on steel imports, arguing that the country’s national security is at stake. The steel move is likely to be the most significant protectionist action taken by Mr Trump since he took office and is being watched closely by allies including Germany, which is chairing this year’s G20 summit in Hamburg next month. At that summit Angela Merkel is expected again to try to push Mr Trump to renounce protectionism. But the action on steel, which is aimed in large part at a flood of cheap Chinese imports on to global markets that US producers blame for the closure of US mills, is just one of a series of moves launched since Mr Trump took office. Working their way through the US trade system are moves against aluminium imports, Canadian aircraft and lumber, and Chinese solar cell and panel producers, among others. Together, they potentially represent the largest and broadest trade sanctions taken by the US since the Reagan administration in the 1980s, said Chad Bown, a former trade adviser to Barack Obama and World Bank economist who is now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. 

By his calculations the percentage of US imports covered by special tariffs is poised to almost double from 3.8 per cent before Mr Trump took office to 7.4 per cent, based on cases launched in Mr Trump’s first 100 days in office. The percentage of Chinese exports to the US hit by such restrictions is expected to rise from 9.2 to 10.9 per cent. But the amount of US imports from the rest of the world subject to new restrictions is expected to triple from 2.2 to 6.4 per cent, according to Mr Bown. Among the countries likely to be hit hardest are Canada, France, Germany, India, Japan and South Korea. The new data highlight the power Mr Trump still has to enact his “America First” trade agenda even as he tries to shake off a scandal relating to alleged Russian interference in last year’s election and struggles to advance tax and other reforms through Congress. US governments in the past have often acted as a brake on requests for protection from US industries. But the Trump administration is seen as encouraging antidumping and has been dusting off dormant statutes to take new actions itself. The steel investigation and a similar one relating to aluminium were launched under a 1962 law that allows presidents to restrict imports in the name of national security. The last time an investigation was even launched was in 2001. None has resulted in the imposition of restrictions since the 1980s. The US steel industry is pushing for the administration to take a broad view of national security, arguing that it cannot provide the steel needed for warships and other military hardware if its other business lines are hit by Chinese dumping of steel on world markets. Both Mr Trump and Mr Ross have in recent days foreshadowed a dramatic move. “Wait until you see what I’m going to do for steel and for your steel companies,” the president told an audience in Ohio last week. 

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