US Will Reclaim Global Supply Chain, Trump Trade Aide Says

Image
Eric Thayer/Bloomberg News

TheĢżUnited States is seeking more ā€œreciprocalā€ trade with other countries in a bid to boost growth, reduce the trade deficit and keep American production capacity out of foreign hands, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said.

ā€œIf we are able to reduce our trade deficit through tough, smart negotiations, we should be able to increase our growth rate,ā€ Navarro said at an economists’ conference in Washington on March 6. Without action to close the gap, ā€œforeigners will eventually own so much of America that there will be nothing left to trade,ā€ he warned.

ā€œOne of the goals of the Trump administration is to reclaim all of the supply chain and manufacturing capability that would otherwise exist if the playing field were level,ā€ Navarro said.

On the campaign trail, Trump championed the idea of reducing the U.S. trade gap, promising to create millions of jobs by bringing back manufacturing positions from overseas. The message resonated in economically struggling states amid a widening of the deficit, which last year increased to the largest since 2012.



President Trump’s goal is to promote ā€œfree, fair and reciprocal trade,ā€ Navarro said, adding that, right now, America’s trade with the world is ā€œanything but reciprocal.ā€ He identified 16 nations that account ā€œfor the lion’s share of the deficit problem,ā€ such as Ireland, Vietnam, China, South Korea, Taiwan and Switzerland.

Asked if China’s yuan is fairly valued, Navarro said, ā€œIt’s clear that the Chinese currency is undervaluedā€ when looked at based on the trade balance between theĢżUnited States and China, though he acknowledged that Chinese authorities recentlyĢżhave been intervening to prop up the yuan. He declined to comment on the value of the U.S. dollar.

Navarro singled out India for having ā€œnotoriously highā€ tariffs and said the U.S. trade deficit with Germany will be among the toughest to tackle.

The American plan seeking to reduce the trade deficit ā€œis not based on higher tariffs but rather getting our partners to lower theirs,ā€ said Navarro, the director of the White House National Trade Council.

The administration’s strategy to narrow its trade gap by dealing directly with other countries won’t work, the International Monetary Fund’s former chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, said on Bloomberg TV shortly after Navarro’s speech.

ā€œEven if we had completely balanced trade, we could well haveĢżā€” we should haveĢżā€” trade deficits with some and trade surpluses with others,ā€ said Blanchard, now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. ā€œIf we start trying to reduce the trade deficit from one country, the goods will go through another country. It will be a game of musical chairs.ā€

Navarro said the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, which Trump pulled out of almost immediately after taking office, would have been a ā€œdeath knellā€ to America’s auto and vehicle parts industry that we ā€œurgently need to bring back to full life.ā€ TheĢżUnited StatesĢżwill aim to tighten the rules of origins provisions in almost all bilateral trade deals it pursues, he added.

More broadly, the Trump administration plans to implement tax, regulatory and energy policy reforms while targeting countries that engage in unfair currency and trade practices, Navarro said. A strong manufacturing and defense industrialist base is a bedrock of America’s national security, he said.

Ģż