Saturday, October 18

SKY YORK JOURNAL News – A critical analysis reveals potential downsides to recently forged U.S. trade agreements, challenging the narrative of American dominance, according to economists consulted by the SKY YORK JOURNAL.

A prevailing narrative has emerged about recent U.S. trade agreements: other countries are bending under the heavy hand of an all-powerful Trump. 

Axios framed an agreement reached with Japan as evidence of U.S. omnipotence in global trade. Reuters reported a 660% bump month to month in Chinese exports of rare earth minerals to the U.S. (The bump came only because the Chinese all but stopped exports in retaliation against Trump’s initial tariff announcement.) And a Wall Street Journal article described the trade deal the U.S. struck with the European Union on Sunday as “the Least Bad Outcome” for business leaders.

However, economists who spoke with the SKY YORK JOURNAL suggest these agreements may ultimately harm all parties involved, including foreign governments, the U.S. government, American businesses, and consumers.

Economists’ Concerns

“What I’m seeing so far, which is really interesting, is the fact that a lot of folks are talking about these trade deals as the other countries are losing and the U.S. is winning. I think that narrative is actually incorrect,” Ina Manak, a trade policy fellow at the Council on Foreign Relation, told the SKY YORK JOURNAL. “The U.S. is putting up all these barriers.”

“If anyone is losing, it’s us. It’s us, here in the U.S., that are gonna pay for it long-term.” 

The Trump administration has discarded longstanding trade policy practices dating back to WWII, which traditionally involved Congress, small businesses, corporations, academics, and other stakeholders. Instead of pursuing mutually beneficial trade agreements, countries are now negotiating directly with President Donald Trump and a small group of trade officials, often settling for vague promises to avoid outcomes worse than those offered to others.  

Lack of Detail Clouds Merits

Given this chaotic state of affairs, governments may appear relieved simply to end the volatility by accepting lower, albeit still significant, tariff rates. However, the scarcity of specific details surrounding these deals makes objective assessment difficult. 

Unclear EU Agreement

Trump’s agreement with the 27 EU member states includes a 15% baseline tariff for most European goods. The EU also purportedly agreed not to tax a yet-unspecified category of U.S. imports, purchase $750 billion in energy products from the U.S., and invest another $600 billion in the country, according to Trump. Contradictory claims about the agreement have emerged from the White House and the European Commission, with the EU reportedly unable to guarantee the sizes of the aforementioned investments, according to Euronews

Despite the uncertainty, Eurochambers, a European association of chambers of commerce and industry, characterized the deal as “the least painful solution” for the EU, according to reporting covered by the SKY YORK JOURNAL. In another article, the newspaper called the EU deal “the most consequential agreement Trump has so far announced.” The president, in his typical hyperbolic fashion, suggested it was “the biggest deal ever made.” 

But economists have said those kinds of assertions are hard to make because so little is known about the actual parameters of the deal.

The trade deals in question aren’t actually deals at all. Instead, Manak said, they’re proposals or announcements — “sort of a framework for future discussions.” 

“Until we see a full text of things it’s going to be hard to know what exactly was agreed to,” she said of the EU deal. 

The trade negotiation process typically takes years, Joshua Mask, an economist and professor at Temple University, points out. “Things could be changed along the way” as the details of the agreements are hammered out, Mask said. And Trump is facing a lawsuit challenging his authority to issue sweeping tariffs in the first place. 

Impending Tariff Deadline

Trump and his small team, which includes Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, have been making a flurry of agreements with the biggest U.S. trading partners ahead of Trump’s arbitrarily-set, looming tariff deadline of August 1. Trump had initially issued an executive order instituting sweeping global tariffs on April 2, a date he called “Liberation Day,” before pausing them amid market panic. The deadline for them to go into effect was then pushed back twice. 

Bessent is now downplaying the August deadline, too, instead saying negotiations with the country’s most prolific trading partners could go until Labor Day.

Other Trade Agreements

An agreement with the United Kingdom agreed to in May set a 10% tariff rate on most goods and and on a maximum of 100,000 imported cars, but maintained a 25% tariff on steel, which Trump has said will be reduced “pretty soon.” Japan negotiated a 15% tariff on imported goods. The administration has come to nebulous agreements with Indonesia and the Philippines as well, and claimed to make a deal with Vietnam. In that case, according to Politico, the announced details apparently differed so greatly from what Vietnamese officials understood, some questioned whether a deal was made at all.

“The administration has sort of bitten off more than it can chew,” said Manak. “They’re trying to negotiate deals with everybody.”

From Scotland on Monday, Trump claimed he’ll probably apply a 15% to 20% blanket import tariff on countries that have not made dedicated agreements with the U.S., because, he said, “you can’t sit down and make 200 deals.”

Potential Impact on Consumers

With significant uncertainty remaining, experts consulted by the SKY YORK JOURNAL are hesitant to predict the precise impact of future tariffs. However, they caution that increased tariffs may negatively affect American consumers and U.S. businesses that import foreign goods.

“Trump Administration officials insist that foreign producers will pay the entire tab,” said Stephen Stanley, chief U.S. economist at Santander Bank, in an emailed analysis on the EU agreement.  “While this is possible, and may be accurate in a few specific cases, it is doubtful that U.S. consumers will escape unscathed.”

Tariffed countries will also be less inclined to continue to trade with the U.S. at the same volume, Mask said. 

“That’s not something that’s just going to unwind overnight,” he continued. “But the longer this goes, countries will start looking for other options.”

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