China International Ceramic & Bathroom Fair, Foshan
■ The 42nd CeramBath (Apr. 18th-23rd, 2025)
The US and China may be nearing a trade deal. That won't stop the global economic slowdown
Time:2019.02.26 Views:516
· President
Donald Trump said on Twitter on Sunday that the U.S. will delay an increase in
tariffs on Chinese goods that was initially planned for early-March.
· Asian markets on Monday reacted positively to Trump's announcement, but several experts pointed out that an easing of tensions between the two economic giants won't stop a global slowdown that's already happening. The U.S. and China appear to be close to ending a tariff fight that hurt financial markets and dented economic activity worldwide, but that's not going to stop the slowdown already seen in the global economy, experts said on Monday.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on
Twitter on Sunday that he would delay an increase in tariffs on Chinese goods
that was initially planned for early-March. Washington and Beijing were locked
in a tariff fight for months last year, but that battle was put on hold — for
an initial 90 days — after Trump met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Argentina
in December.
The American president also said he
would meet Xi at his golf club in Mar-a-Lago, Florida, "to conclude an
agreement" if "both sides make additional progress." Trump
didn't announce a timeline for that meeting, but CNBC reported last week that
the two countries were discussing holding a late-March summit.
Asian markets on Monday reacted
positively to Trump's announcement, but several experts pointed out that an
easing in tensions between the two economic giants won't stop a global slowdown
that's already happening.
"I think we need to take a little
bit of a step back and take a look at the economic cycle," Paul Kitney,
chief equity strategist at Daiwa Capital Markets, told CNBC's "Squawk
Box" on Monday. "The shape of the cycle is one where we see
moderation in growth in the United States this year ... we see risks of a
recession in the United States growing possibly as early as the middle of
2020."
"The downturn is not going
away" regardless of how positively current risks — including the
U.S.-China trade war and the U.K.'s impending exit from the European Union —
are resolved, Kitney said.
The International Monetary Fund in
January projected the global economy would grow 3.5 percent this year, down
from 3.7 percent in 2018.
Recent data have pointed to that
slowdown materializing: A widely watched indicator of factory activity, the
Purchasing Managers' Index, showed weakness in major economies such as the
U.S., China, Japan and Germany. In addition, several trade-oriented economies
also reported softness in their import and export activities.
That downward momentum in the global
economy will likely get worse — at least into the next quarter — "even if
we do see a deal of some kind," Sadiq Currimbhoy, global strategist and
head of research at Maybank Kim Eng, told CNBC's "Street Signs" on
Monday.
'Core, critical thorny issues'
Additional tariffs that were implemented during
the tit-for-tat fight last year have not gone away. That's one of the reasons
why some strategists and analysts have refrained from cheering the latest trade
development between the two largest economies in the world.
"Indeed, there is no reason to turn
over-optimistic. We don't expect the existing tariffs to be reduced any time
soon," Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at consultancy firm Oxford Economics,
wrote in a Monday note. "It is also not clear whether there will be any
significant reduction in other US restrictions in the area of technology or a
change in its stance on Huawei."
There has also been a lack of progress
in addressing several "core, critical thorny issues" between the U.S.
and China, said Pushan Dutt, an economics and political science professor at
business school INSEAD. That means global uncertainties brought about by
tensions between the U.S. and China may drag on longer, he said.
"In the short term, we will
basically have the Chinese agreeing to buy some more products, some more
soybeans, some more natural energy. The U.S. hopefully will scale back some of
the protection measures," Dutt told CNBC's "Capital Connection"
on Monday.
"At the same time, we have to keep
in mind that the really core, critical thorny issues — which is to do with IP
(intellectual property rights) protection, technology transfers, subsidies for
the Chinese technological champions — those have not been addressed. So, the
best we can hope for is that they will continue to talk about these into the
future," he added.
From CNBC
Copyright Foshan China Ceramics City Group Co., Ltd. Site by:YCL