Saturday, April 26

US Trade Wars

Analysis

The US will end up with higher tariffs

  1. Trump is ideologically committed to tariffs, and short of a disaster in implementation, the US is likely to end up with an increased tariff regime at the end of a protracted and probably chaotic negotiation process.
  2. Trump’s baseline 10% tariffs on every nation are likely to stay in some form as they are a new revenue source for the government. Given the Republicans traditional hatred of new taxes, this might be Trump’s only way to (at least partially) address US fiscal problems and/or offset the costs of continued tax cuts.
  3. The April-2-announced-then-paused additional tariffs on creditor nations (the so-called reciprocal tariffs) are primarily a negotiating tactic in Trump’s inimitable idiosyncratic style. He will ultimately reduce them where the targeted countries offer some significant concession to the US for their trade imbalance. In the short-run, this is a shakedown. In the longer-run, it is unclear whether Trump will continue to sustain sufficient market and public support for these add-on tariffs. 
  4. Some form of super-tariff on China is likely to remain (see below).

The US tariff negotiation process could become messy

  1. Trump will muddle though the tariff negotiation process: he will add new tariffs, pause tariffs, reduce tariffs, increase tariffs, remove tariffs, and back track as he negotiates with the rest of the world. If he fails to move forward with one country, he will shift focus to another country. He sees unpredictability as a negotiation strength. He does not play by the conventional bureaucratic rule book. 
  2. Negotiating credibility requires him to be rougher, tougher and meaner than he was in 2018-2020 tariff cycle. Because Trump needs to be tougher, he is happy to take some market pain to pursue his negotiating strategy. His strategy will continue to provide short-term shocks to bond and equity markets in the US (and globally). 
  3. But this is a high-wire act. Trump would not want to crash markets, see a flight of capital away from the US, nor bring on a full-blown recession. Hence, I expect markets to be tested and then eased back on multiple times. Market volatility will be high during the negotiations.
  4. It is also a lot of work. Trump is trying to negotiate with perhaps up to 100-plus countries at once. This is a Herculean task for the US, that benefits the nations in the rest of the world. each of whom only need to negotiate one agreement with the US.
  5. China, Mexico and Canada have been subject to this strategy once before in the 2018-2020 tariff cycle. All nations would have learnt that capitulating to Trump does not buy long-term reprieve or certainty from Trump’s US. Consequently, Trump is likely to find this round of negotiations much more challenging than the 2018-2020 round. He runs the risk of being seen as a one-trick-pony. No-one likes to be repeatedly extorted with the same strategy – it will be a case of once bitten, twice shy.  If Trump is not careful, rougher, tougher and meaner can quickly look like an over-exaggerated pantomime when it is ignored.

China is a particular focus of US concern

  1. China is a growing threat to US hegemony and dominance. China has grown quickly over the past 35 years. Its global trade has exceeded the US every year since 2012. Trump’s tariffs appear to have the added objective of constraining China’s trade and geo-strategic ambitions. Trump undoubtedly wants to tighten the screws on what he sees as China’s poor trade practices. Consequently, China is likely to have higher US tariffs compared with other nations.
  2. China is not without options in this negotiation:
    • First the US negotiating hand is weakened by its large fiscal debt and deficit. If Trump moves too far or too fast, it could trigger a fast devaluation of the US dollar, a flight of capital from the US, an increase in the US inflation rate, and/or a increase in the US Treasury bond yield rate. 
    • Second, the US negotiating hand is weakened by any public reaction to higher prices for Chinese imports or (if nothing is resolved quickly) empty supermarket shelves. 
    • Finally, China can more easily purchase from the rest of the world what it currently imports from the US; than the US can import from the rest of the world what it imports from China.
  1. It is possible that as part of its negotiations with other nations, the US will ask its interlocutors to impose similar tariffs on China. You can expect China to retaliate against any nation that participates in a US-led tariff blockade of China. If the US and China get into these positions, Australia could find itself with some difficult choices.
  2. China would not want to lose face by being humiliated into providing more trade concessions.

Final observations

  1. While Trump will continue to use the rhetoric of repatriating industry to the US, his approach is unlikely to achieve this goal (it just doesn’t offer the policy certainty over the 20+ year time horizon business needs to bring manufacturing back to the US). I suspect Trump knows this. Nonetheless, the rhetoric is useful red meat for his supporters.
  2. I do not for one second think Trump is playing 4D-chess or executing a sophisticated and finely calibrated optimal tariff theory approach. It is not who he is. This is a bare-knuckled playground bully brawl.

Monday, January 27

The State of the Australian Economy

I am seeing posts on X (formerly Twitter) and Bluesky that argue all is well with the Australian economy. The stylised facts go something like this:

  • Unemployment is at 4.0 per cent
  • Headline inflation is at 2.3 per cent / year
  • Wages growth is at 3.5 per cent / year (well above inflation)
  • The stock market is at record highs
  • Household Wealth is at a record high
And in the main these statistics are correct, although arguably some are in part misleading. More fundamentally, these statistics are cherry picked: Good statistics are highlighted and the more challenging ones are glossed over. I would contend the state of the Australian economy is much more of a mixed bag. There are definite strengths. But there are also challenges. And, importantly, there are pain points arising from the economic trajectory since the COVID pandemic notwithstanding the current good news. Let's begin with the strengths.

Sunday, January 12

Australian Recessions

We have lived through more than 12 months of the advocates for an immediate central bank interest rate cut saying that if we don't get a rate cut this month, the economy will enter a recession.  So far those advocates have been wrong. It reminds me of the Paul Samuelson joke: “the stock market has predicted nine out of the last five recessions”.

Sunday, December 29

Inflation update

Context

Inflation in Australia (and the rest of the world) took off after the COVID pandemic, after an almost 30-year period of lowish inflation.


Sunday, May 1

The housing affordability that will matter

When people talk about housing affordability, they are not always talking about the same thing. There are three distinct housing affordabilities:

  • purchase affordability - how much it costs to buy a new or existing house at the time of the purchase,
  • repayment affordability- how much it costs to service a mortgage on a house, and
  • rental affordability- how much it costs to rent a house.

In this post I want to talk about the one that will be important over the next 18 months: repayment affordability. 

As interest rates were lowered following the COVID pandemic, these were capitalised into higher housing prices. This is a long run trend, since the peak home loan rates in 1990. As lower and lower interest rates have allowed borrowers to borrow more money, this has contributed to higher and higher house purchase prices. [Note, this is not the only contributor to growing house prices; for example, long-run growth in two income households has also been important].

But this is all about to change. It has been more than 30 years since Australia has operated in world of high inflation. Most of our nation’s policy thinking is now rooted in the low interest world of recent decades. Yet the latest headline inflation figure of 5.1 per cent suggests we might be about to re-experience high inflation (above the agreed target of keeping inflation within a 2 to 3 per cent per year range).

Saturday, December 25

Christmas 2021 - a complete set of Covid charts for Australia

At Christmas 2019 I was newly retired and completely unaware of the global pandemic that was already nascent in Wuhan China. The past two years have been a rough, roller-coaster ride. The shock of the initial cases and deaths. Victoria's second wave. The serendipity that flattening the curve managed to achieve the elimination of local transmission. A slower start to mass vaccination in Australia compared with other high income nations. The arrival of the more infectious Delta variant, which proved challenging in NSW and Victoria, and the resulting interstate travel restrictions. And in the past four weeks, the arrival of the even more infectious Omicron variant. Largely as a result of Omicron, 14 per cent of all Australian cases occurred in the past week.

Saturday, December 12

Impact of COVID-19 on the Australian Economy

Compared with the rest of the world, Australia has managed the COVID-19 pandemic well. Cumulatively, there have been relatively few cases and deaths per capita, and there is currently little if any local transmission of the virus. 

Nonetheless, the Australian economy has experienced its largest contraction in at least 60 years. In the next chart, we can see the blue line, representing growth in the size of the economy, dips lower than ever since the ABS has been collecting this data.

While the economy is no longer in recession, it remains 3.8 per cent smaller than it was a year ago. Normally, it grows by around 2 per cent each year. 

Supporting economic growth has been substantial government spending on payments to individuals. Unemployment benefits have almost tripled from where they were, and total Commonwealth social assistance payments are up by around $15 billion every quarter.


Household expenditure, in part supported by government payments, has contributed to the economic improvement in Q3 2020. But spending by category is very mixed, and the spending patterns for Victoria, with its extended lock down, differ from the rest of Australia. Of interest is the increased spending on food and alcohol, and the decreased expenditure on hotels, cafes, transport and vehicles. The impact on health spending is also worth noting.
































We can also see the impact of the COVID-19 recession on industry sectors. We can use the Gross Value Added (GVA) table from the National Accounts to identify the industry sectors that have been most impacted by the pandemic. Construction services are down $2.5 billion/quarter, as is air transport. Accommodation and food services were down $4.5 billion in Q2 and $2 billion in Q3. Property operators and real estate services were down $2.5 billion in Q2 and $1.5 billion in Q3. Administrative support services are down $3.5 billion/quarter. Health care and social assistance had a $3 billion drop in Q2, but this recovered in Q3. The airline industry has suffered the biggest percentage drop.


















We can also see the mixed impact of COVID-19 on the economy in the retail turnover data. Again we can see the impact of the second lock down in Victoria.


 

Turning to the labour market, the unemployment rate has risen from 5 to 7 per cent as a result of the pandemic. With the unemployment rate for men and women rising similarly. 


The participation rate was hugely impacted by the pandemic, but much of that impact has now reversed. In April and May, proportionately more women left the labour market than men.


While part-time employment numbers appear to have recovered, the number employed full-time remains below the pre-pandemic levels. The number in the labour force has largely recovered.










In aggregate, men and women are working fewer hours than before the pandemic. In April and May, women experienced a proportionately larger reduction in hours worked compared with men, but this is no longer the case. 




In terms of ages, it looks like younger workers have been most impacted by COVID-19.



The extended lockdown has had a bigger impact on the Victorian labour market.