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Fears of Trump trade wars cast pall over Asia-Pacific summit
Reuters Events SMR and Advanced Reactor 2025
Fears of Trump trade wars cast pall over Asia-Pacific summit
By Luis Jaime CISNEROS
Lima (AFP) Nov 12, 2024

The presidents of the United States, China and other Asia Pacific nations gather in Lima this week for an economic summit overshadowed by the prospect of a world embroiled in trade wars under Donald Trump.

It will be the last Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit for Joe Biden before he hands the presidency to Trump next year after a rout for the Democratic Party in November 5 presidential elections.

Trump's "America First" agenda, with protectionist stances on global commerce, fossil fuel extraction and foreign conflicts, is threatening alliances Biden had built on issues ranging from the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, to climate change and trade.

Biden will be in the Peruvian capital later this week with China's Xi Jinping, who had called for the two countries to find ways to "get along" after Trump's victory.

It is not known if the men will meet for private talks, nor has any envoy from Trump's Republican Party been confirmed to attend the summit.

The president-elect has promised to slap huge new tariffs on Beijing in an attempt to balance bilateral trade, which he claims has left America holding the short end of the stick.

He also threatened tariffs of 25 percent or more on goods coming from Mexico unless it stops an "onslaught of criminals and drugs" crossing the border.

"Trump's victory will definitely impact the APEC summit, given his rather protectionist narrative," international relations professor Oscar Vidarte of the Catholic University of Peru told AFP.

"APEC is obviously weakened," he added.

APEC, created in 1989 with a goal of regional trade liberalization, brings together 21 economies that jointly represent 62 percent of global GDP and over 40 percent of global commerce.

With the theme: "Empower. Include. Grow," the 2024 summit program was to focus on trade and investment for inclusive growth, innovation, and sustainable growth for its members' common good.

But uncertainty over Trump's next moves now clouds the event's agenda -- as it does with the COP29 climate talks under way in Azerbaijan, and a G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro next week.

- 'A tougher stance' -

Biden had not removed all the tariffs imposed on China during Trump's first term from 2017-2021.

But observers say the 47th president's increasingly pugilistic narrative will drive the wedge between Washington and Beijing ever deeper.

"With respect to the two main issues on the agenda -- migration and China -- Trump will take a tougher stance... than Biden," Michael Shifter, an expert at the Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank in Washington, told AFP.

"There is a risk, however, that pressuring governments in the Pacific Basin to pick sides between China and the US could be counterproductive, increasing China's presence and influence in Latin America."

While in Peru, Xi will inaugurate South America's first Chinese-funded port, in Chancay, north of Lima.

Expected to serve as a major trade hub, the $3.5-billion complex is seen as symbolic of Beijing's growing influence in South America, where it has built a vast array of railways, highways and other infrastructure.

China is an ally of Western pariahs Russia and North Korea, and is building up its own military capacity while ramping up pressure on Taiwan, which it claims as part of its territory.

But the world's second-largest economy is grappling with a prolonged housing crisis and sluggish consumption that can only be made worse by Trump's tariffs.

Economists say punitive tariffs will likely also harm the American economy and affect trade with neighbors Canada and Mexico -- both APEC members -- as well as Europe.

Starting Wednesday, Lima will receive government ministers and business leaders of APEC member countries, which also include Russia, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Chile and Australia.

Ministerial meetings will take place Thursday, followed by talks at the level of heads of state the following two days.

Russia's Vladimir Putin is not attending the summit, for which Peru has deployed more than 13,000 soldiers in Lima.

Asia, the world's economic engine, prepares for Trump shock
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 10, 2024 - Some Asian countries stand to gain if US president-elect Donald Trump pushes ahead with his promised massive tariffs on China and triggers a new wave of factory relocations to the rest of the region.

But a trade war between the world's biggest economies would also destabilise markets everywhere, with Asia -- which contributes the largest share of global growth -- the most affected.

Trump, who won a crushing presidential victory this week, vowed during his campaign to slap 60 percent tariffs on all Chinese goods entering the United States in an attempt to balance trade between the two nations.

Analysts however question whether the new president will stick to such a high figure, and dispute the blow such tariffs could inflect on the Chinese economy, estimating GDP could be lowered by between 0.7 percent and 1.6 percent.

The cooling effect would also make waves throughout Southeast Asia, where production chains are closely linked to China and enjoy significant investment from Beijing.

"Lower US demand for Chinese goods due to higher tariffs on China will translate into lower demand for ASEAN exports, even if there aren't US tariffs levied directly onto those economies," said Adam Ahmad Samdin, of Oxford Economics.

Indonesia is particularly exposed through its strong exports of nickel and minerals, but China is also the top trading partner of Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.

In addition to China, Donald Trump has also warned of an increase of 10 to 20 percent on duties for all imports, as part of his protectionist policies and fixation that other countries take advantage of the US.

"The extent of these effects likely depends on the direct exposure of each economy to the US," said Samdin, who added that America accounts for a 39.1 percent share of Cambodian exports, 27.4 percent from Vietnam, 17 percent from Thailand and 15.4 percent from the Philippines.

- India to be targeted? -

Trump first slapped China with heavy tariffs in 2018 during his first administration, leading to the emergence of "connector countries", through which Chinese companies passed their products to avoid American taxes.

Those countries could be in the line of fire now.

"Vietnam's electronics exports to the US could also be targeted by Trump, in a bid to halt the diversion of Chinese electronic products to the US via Vietnam since 2018," said Lloyd Chan, a senior analyst at MUFG, Japan's largest bank.

"This is not inconceivable. Trade rewiring has notably gained traction in the region's electronics value chain."

"India could itself become a target of protectionist measures by the US due to the large share of Chinese components in Indian products," added Alexandra Hermann, an economist with Oxford Economics.

Trump could also impose higher tariffs on Indian goods in sectors such as "automobiles, textiles, pharmaceuticals and wines, which could make Indian exports less competitive in the US", said Ajay Srivastava of the New Delhi-based Global Trade Research Initiative.

A trade war would be dangerous for India, said Ajay Sahai, director of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations.

"Trump is a transactional person. He may target higher tariffs on certain items of Indian exports so he can negotiate for lower tariffs for US products in India," he told AFP.

- Supply chain rejig -

In the medium term, these negative effects could be counterbalanced by establishing factories outside China to escape the fallout.

The "China+1" strategy initiated during Donald Trump's first term saw production shifts to India, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.

With its geographical position and cheap skilled labour, Vietnam has already been one of the main beneficiaries.

The country has notably received investments from Taiwanese Apple subcontractors Foxconn and Pegatron and South Korea's Samsung, becoming the second-largest exporter of smartphones in the world behind China.

"The likelihood increases that even more businesses will want to... have a second, or third, production base outside China," said Bruno Jaspaert, chairman of the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam.

Chinese firms themselves are investing massively from Vietnam to Indonesia in sectors including solar, batteries, electric vehicles and minerals.

"American companies and investors are very interested in opportunities in Vietnam and this will continue under the incoming Trump Administration," said Adam Sitkoff, executive director of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hanoi.

But whether it is low-end or high-tech production, China's competitive advantage in terms of price, scale and quality is difficult to reproduce, warns Nomura bank.

A reorganisation of production chains could lead to a "loss of efficiency" and increased prices, "with a negative impact on global growth", Thomas Helbling, deputy director of the IMF for Asia, recently explained to AFP.

Asian countries could therefore gain export market share but ultimately see their situation deteriorate amid weakening global demand.

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