If Trump’s 2016 election represented a step into the unknown for Australia, his re-election would represent a significant escalation of economic risks.
In the short term, Trump’s mishandling of the pandemic, which has cost at least 200,000 American lives, would continue on into 2021, further undermining the US economy and global growth. Without an effective vaccine, a re-elected Trump administration means continuing US waves of coronavirus and lower global growth, with flow-on effects for Australian exporters and increased risks to the global financial system.
But it’s two more deliberate Trump policies that pose longer-term problems for Australia.
A continuation of climate inaction by the US undermines the chances of effective international co-operation to limit increases in global temperatures. While the climate denialist Morrison government is preventing meaningful action to reduce Australian emissions, as the developed country most exposed to climate change, Australia needs concerted international action to reduce global carbon emissions if it is to avoid significant damage to long-term growth.
A re-elected Trump administration would materially reduce the chances of effective international action, especially as the election occurs at a key moment when the EU has indicated an intention to levy carbon tariffs on countries, like Australia, that fail to take meaningful action to reduce emissions, and China has pledged to be carbon-neutral by 2060. With Biden promising to rejoin the Paris Accord, which currently represents the most effective vehicle for concerted international action, November looms as a key moment in Australia’s long-term economic future.
Four more years of Trump will also further destabilise the international trading system. As a relatively small, open, export-oriented economy, Australia depends heavily on major economies adhering to a basic structure around trade and tariffs, even if — when it comes to anti-dumping — Australia has its own protectionist flaws.
Trump has systematically undermined the World Trade Organisation, prevented its appellate process from functioning at all, unilaterally rewritten trade agreements, repeatedly threatened a trade war with Europe, and actually started a trade war with China — a key reason identified by the United Nations for a marked reduction in international trade in 2019. This had an initial direct impact on world growth of around 0.3%, which in turn affects the Australian economy and exports.
But when countries depart from a rules-based trade order, others tend to retaliate and the broader international system starts to disintegrate. China, which responded to Trump’s repeated imposition of new tariffs with its own retaliatory tariffs, has begun using anti-dumping measures (long exploited by Australia against China) against us, making trade a now-standard part of foreign policy.
The return to fashion of onshore manufacturing in the wake of COVID-19, and the growing reaction to Chinese belligerence, will only accelerate the disintegration of an effective global trade framework.
Australia has relied on maintaining strong personal relations with Trump in order to avoid becoming collateral damage in his trade conflicts, and has so far been adept at dodging various bullets fired by the White House. But with a figure as arbitrary and inconsistent as Trump, that luck may not hold out. Australia is now reduced to plaintively urging, via Washington ambassador Arthur Sinodinos, a US return to the discredited Trans-Pacific Partnership.
A Biden administration is unlikely to be significantly less protectionist than Trump’s, but Biden is more likely to end the active undermining of international trade rules by the world’s biggest economy, which both threatens world growth and the exports of smaller economies like our own.
With Biden and Trump competing to see who can be more Sinophobic, there’s also unlikely to be any de-escalation of tensions with China; the process of “decoupling” in industries like communications and media is likely to continue. That’s something of a non-issue for Australia, however, given our relations with Beijing are already at a post-Whitlam nadir.
A Biden administration might mean less overt pressure on Australia to play deputy sheriff against China, but despite the claims of the China Lobby, the Morrison government has run its own race on China, even if that’s been a distinction without a difference as far as the Communist autocracy goes. But it might also mean more consistency in policy, with Australia less likely to be stranded by a sudden whim of Trump’s to re-embrace his “friend”, the “incredible guy” Xi Jinping.
But even if Trump loses, the forces within the United States that created him will remain: isolationism, hostility to free trade, racism and an impetus to division and conflict, all fueled by super-wealthy elites agile at exploiting the US political system to obtain results that further strengthen their position. None of that augurs well for Australia’s long-term economic interests.
‘A re-elected Trump’; ‘a Biden administration’. You really are optimistic Bernard! Here, I’m thinking a Trump win through shonky voting, or a Trump coup. But no matter what there is sure to be violence with para military militia that may well turn into civil war. And even if that doesn’t eventuate, the USA is doomed to be more inward looking and self-destructing as failing empires/superpowers do. The big fraud of the US is their claim of freedom and democracy. The question for Australia is when should we be distancing ourselves from the USA and devoting more attention to perhaps more mutually beneficial and longer lasting relationships with other nations, and should we accept US citizens as refugees when things go pear shaped?
No! Fuk ’em! They and their gun culture aren’t welcome here!
It’s already here. Haven’t you seen the gun toting black shirted Border Farce immigration and customs clerks (wash my mouth out, ‘agents’), private non-warranted security and public transport thugs, and domestic violence men with AVOs, Victoria’s ‘don’t shoot me! police (& still no royal commission like in Qld and NSW), and now the AFP, all with pistols and purportedly with legislated immunity from criminal and civil laws (well maybe not for domestic violence men unless they have a Punch-hard mate in the Qld police force). Doesn’t that make us all feel so safe!
I take your point and agree, but I was thinking of some very dear USA friends, none of whom have guns and a couple of pacifist Quakers too. But on more careful thought it will be the poor and people of colour that will suffer the most from Trump henchmen’s feet more heavily on their necks than well educated mostly white ex-Washington DC officials.
Thought the same Mark. First they have to get through the election without an insurrection. Trump displays grandiose ideas that he couldn’t possibly lose a fair election. The militias are ready. This could go so much more pear shaped than just having Trump or Biden elected.
As Robert Benchley might say again, Ain’t it offal, just to contemplate the USA election upcoming. Two of the worst candidates ever are up, no real choice at all, and policy is reduced to theft, lies, oppression, deception, dereliction, perverse wrongheadedness. Trump to F D R, say, is as an ant’s turd to the Antilles or Atlas Mtns. Biden may listen to advice at least, if he stays awake and alert. International health, physically, politically, diplomatically, economically, is very low and things may worsen more. Merkel may soon go, but the rest are of no use or decency, little talent. Selfishness and greed have hold of too many…our poor suffering planet has so little support.
“Australia needs concerted international action to reduce global carbon emissions if it is to avoid significant damage to long-term growth.”
Correction. … if it is to avoid mass death and leaving humanity as a small rump of tribes scattered around the world. Fixed!
Seems to me that BK might not have quite understood the import of our position on climate change.
You imply that Morrison is a reluctant Trump admirer and interacts with him just to keep Australia in the trade loop. My impression from everything I’ve seen is that Morrison admires and respects Trump -rather like the same impression many people have in UK, that Johnson admires and respects Trump. All in it together?
A Trump re-election would also further erode any lingering faith in the US as a reliable ally….and that might be to our long term advantage by focusing our attention on the fact that our future security can only be maintained through stronger regional alliances. There is still a widespread delusion that we can rely on the US to support us in any military conflict. I cannot believe that is true now, if it has ever was.