Macroscope | China’s tariff troubles pale beside Germany’s economic woes
Trump, who revels in being unpredictable, has reignited speculation over the seriousness, scope and strategy behind his tariff policies. However, a cursory glance at the size of the trade surpluses the targeted countries have with the US – the three economies have the largest bilateral surpluses with the US along with the euro zone – shows Trump is behaving true to form.
Deeply suspicious of trade, which he views through the narrow and superficial lens of bilateral balances, Trump is going after countries with large surpluses with the US. In the eyes of the president-elect and his advisers, any nation that enjoys a hefty surplus with the US must be stealing well-paid manufacturing jobs from the US, hollowing out the middle class.
As China’s economy slowed sharply, Europe’s exporters have had to rely on US demand to pick up the slack. Nowhere is this more apparent than in Germany whose trade surplus with the US alone accounts for 40 per cent of the EU’s total, according to GlobalData TS Lombard.
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