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Trade War May Boost China While Hurting U.S. Growth, ECB Says

Trade War May Boost China While Hurting U.S. Growth, ECB Says

(Bloomberg) -- A global tariff tit-for-tat could boost China’s $12 trillion economy and hurt the U.S. expansion, according to European Central Bank research published Wednesday.

The conclusions challenge President Donald Trump’s assertions that trade wars are “good, and easy to win.” They also counter the argument that China has more to lose from a spat with its main trading partner because of its greater dependence on exports.

The ECB assumed the U.S. imposes 10 percent tariffs on all imports and its trading partners respond in kind. Under that scenario, China would more than compensate for the loss by selling its products to other markets. The hit to U.S. investment and trade would lower activity there by 2 percent in the first year after levies start, though the effects would fade over time as the U.S. adjusts its own production.

Trade War May Boost China While Hurting U.S. Growth, ECB Says

“Qualitatively the results are unambiguous: an economy imposing a tariff which prompts retaliation by other countries is clearly worse off,” ECB economists Allan Gloe Dizioli and Bjoern van Roye wrote in the report. “Its living standards fall and jobs are lost.”

Protectionist measures taken so far will have only a marginal effect on global economic activity as the affected products represent only a small part of world trade, according to the ECB. The world’s two largest economies have already slapped tariffs on each other’s goods, and the Chinese government called off planned talks with U.S. officials, risking a prolonged conflict that could disrupt the global supply chains.

Tariffs imposed so far will cost 0.5 percentage point a year on China’s growth and up to 1.5 percentage point if more levies are imposed, Bloomberg Economics estimates.

What Our Economists Say...

“The stand-off between the world’s two biggest economies is clearly going in a worrying direction, with the likely collateral damage to China’s growth -- and Asia’s supply chains -- increasing."

--Tom Orlik, Bloomberg Economics chief economist

The hit to the U.S. economy seems more manageable at 0.4 percentage point in 2019, according to Oxford Economics. The ECB research suggests the impact will be bigger because it factors in the amplifying affect of a deterioration in business and consumer confidence.

The confidence impact is particularly tricky to estimate, but researchers estimate that neither China nor the U.S. will be spared.

“Global financial-market reactions have a significant and more wide-ranging impact on output across countries, with global output around 0.75 percent lower in the first year,” Dizioli and van Roye write. “The tightening of financial conditions dampens U.S. GDP by about 0.7 percent,” and U.S. stocks will decline by 16 percent, they said.

The euro area is unlikely to be insulated from the tension. While the research doesn’t quantify the impact on the region, President Mario Draghi has said a slight downward revision to its projections for the bloc’s growth in 2018 and 2019 was due to weaker global trade.

To contact the reporters on this story: Piotr Skolimowski in Frankfurt at pskolimowski@bloomberg.net;Xiaoqing Pi in Frankfurt at xpi1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Gordon at pgordon6@bloomberg.net, David Goodman

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.