Good afternoon from New Economy Brief.
A week is a long time in politics. Since our last New Economy Brief, where we unpacked Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs, the US President has announced a 90-day pause on tariffs above the baseline 10%. This is with the exception of China, Trump’s main target, which at the time of writing has a 145% levy (with some electronics such as smartphones and computers currently exempt), and Canada and Mexico which still face tariffs of 25%.
So is the panic over? Well, not exactly. Even after the temporary climbdown, a combination of global economic uncertainty, tariff escalation with China and the remaining 10% tariffs means the US still faces a 50% chance of recession this year according to the Chief Executive of JP Morgan, Jamie Dimon.
And the economic fallout stretches far beyond US borders. Global South countries – many of which are already facing substantial sovereign debt crises – are particularly vulnerable to global trade instability. This week, we explore the effect of Trump’s tariffs on these countries, which are often overlooked in discussions about the world economy.
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How did we get here?
Before the 90-day pause, lower-income economies faced some of the highest levies: 50% for Lesotho, 47% for Madagascar, 40% for Mauritius, 37% for Botswana and 30% for South Africa, Africa’s biggest exporter to the US. In Asia, Bangladesh’s tariff was 37%; Laos’ 48%; Vietnam’s 46%. Trump singled out Cambodia for particular ire, slapping it with a 49% tariff – the highest in Asia. He claimed the country had “made a fortune with the United States of America” because its own tariff on US imports was 97%. The average daily wage in Cambodia is only $6.65.
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The impact.
Lesotho has made headlines for reaching the top of Trump’s original tariff list. In recent years the country has exported large amounts of clothes, particularly jeans, to the US. Clothes make up nearly three quarters of Lesotho’s exports to the US, its biggest trading partner after South Africa. With US trade representing 10% of Lesotho’s national income, the country’s clothes manufacturers have described the potential tariffs as “devastating”. On Global South impacts more generally, the economist Jayati Ghosh explains that “the heaviest burden [of the tariffs] will fall on the developing world” and that despite the pause, “canceled or delayed export orders are already undermining production and fueling unemployment. Meanwhile, financial volatility is threatening economic stability long before the full impact of Trump’s tariffs can be felt.” But if the Trump tariff saga is panicking markets and politicians the world over, why is the Global South particularly affected?
Debt. Since the pandemic, much of the Global South has been immersed in a debt crisis like nothing seen since the 1990s and early 2000s, with 54 countries now in a crisis so deep that “people barely get two meals a day” and “lives are being destroyed” due to the impacts on the cost of living, according to Bernard Anaba of the Integrated Social Development Centre (ISODEC) in Ghana. We explained some of the reasons for this in New Economy Brief last year, including the fact that private lenders have been able to charge extortionate rates to Global South countries, worsening the debt trap. At the same time, large parts of the Global South are already experiencing devastating impacts from climate change. The countries facing the worst impacts are also often those that are most unable to respond to climate-related emergencies due to their debt burdens.
Dollar dominance. Because the dollar is the global reserve currency, many lower-income countries borrow in dollars rather than their own currency. Exporting to the US – and being paid in dollars – is therefore particularly important for paying off debt, as well as for importing essentials like energy and food, Positive Money explains.
But what about the falling dollar? One might hope that the falling price of the dollar could help countries with high debt burdens, as it would lower the cost of their debt payments which are in dollars. However, Debt Justice argues that this potential upside has been wiped out by the fact that currencies in many of these counties have fallen against the dollar.
Increased borrowing costs. Global South countries are also being hit by increased borrowing costs. As Debt Justice’s Tim Jones explains: “when negative global financial events happen, speculators move money into what they perceive as safe assets – debts of rich country governments – and away from what they perceive as risky – debts of lower-income country governments.” This pushes up borrowing costs for these countries. Last week the average yield (the return an investor expects from a bond) on government bonds from the 20 lower-income countries with the highest levels of external debt rose from 10% to 12%.
Global economic downturn. When it was announced that most countries would “only” see 10% tariffs, many pointed out that this would be of little benefit in the context of a global economic downturn. For Global South countries in particular, the global downturn a trade war could cause is an even bigger threat than the tariffs themselves. Many of the countries with the highest debt payments rely on raw materials for their exports, and the prices of these commodities are particularly vulnerable to economic shocks and slowdowns. A global downturn, or even a recession, would be catastrophic for Global South countries’ export revenues – even for nations with lower tariffs.
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Re-writing its own rules.
Trump’s ruthless approach will be devastating for Global South countries. And it’s worth remembering that the reason why Global South economies are so export-led is rooted in colonialism, and this has been further entrenched by pressure from the US, and US-dominated institutions, in recent decades. As in so many other areas, Trump is overturning decades of US policy and punishing others for a position that the US pushed them into. One example is the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa), a piece of legislation introduced by Bill Clinton in 2000 which gave 32 African countries tariff-free access to the US market, which high tariffs on African countries would reverse. Framed as a tool for boosting development, Agoa of course also allowed American consumers to benefit from cheap goods, and was expanded by George W. Bush in 2004.
One-sided free trade. It’s hard to remember among all this chaos that tariffs are not in and of themselves always harmful. Global Justice Now’s Nick Dearden has argued that tariffs can be a useful tool for economies to protect domestic industries and that Global South countries have often been forced to accept free trade even though this has harmed them. One notorious example is the impact of trade liberalisation policies on rice production in Haiti, where the IMF pressured the government to slash tariffs on imports, which wiped out Haitian rice farming. Going further back, it is notable that many of the world’s richest countries – including the US and Germany – had high tariff barriers during their period of rapid initial development.
A unipolar world becomes multipolar. As we have covered before, the tariff saga will potentially accelerate the trend towards a ‘multipolar’ world in which the dollar ceases to dominate. This isn’t a fringe idea – Gordon Brown argued last week that “the way forward can only be for countries in a multipolar order – if there is going to be order – to talk to each other and work with each other and consult with each other”. There is no doubt that Trump’s trade policy has already disrupted the global order; what remains to be seen is if the new order that emerges in its place will allow Global South countries more influence or further entrench global inequalities. One way to tip the balance in a positive direction would be to cancel Global South debts – this is an area in which the UK could take advantage of the City of London’s status as the world’s second biggest financial centre to play a genuine leadership role. Of the countries covered by the G20 debt relief scheme, 90% have contracts governed by UK law, meaning that action here would have a significant impact.