Fortune | FORTUNE 18小时前
Don’t let EU, Japan deals lull you into a sense of security, says Trump’s former commerce secretary—a trade war with China may still be in the cards
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尽管美国与欧盟和日本达成贸易协议,市场一度松了口气,但前商务部长威尔伯·罗斯对此表示担忧。他认为,尽管白宫在与其他主要经济体达成协议方面取得了一定进展,但与中国达成协议的前景并不乐观。罗斯预测,在双方90天的贸易争端暂停期结束后,可能重回贸易战。他指出,中国领导层将在8月就重要政策和人事进行决策,在此之前不太可能同意有争议的协议,并且不愿被视为“屈服于特朗普的要求”。中国方面也表示,如果美国不表现出诚意并纠正错误做法,谈判将难以进行。罗斯估计,中国选择不达成协议而继续承受高关税的可能性为40-50%。如果协议未能达成,双方的经济制裁可能恢复到之前的较高水平,这可能严重影响中国对美出口,尽管中国可能尝试通过其他国家转运以规避关税。

🇺🇸 贸易协议的短期缓和与长期风险:美国与欧盟和日本达成贸易协议,一度缓解了全球市场的紧张情绪。然而,前商务部长威尔伯·罗斯对与中国达成协议的前景表示怀疑,认为贸易战的阴影并未完全散去,市场仍面临不确定性。

🇨🇳 中国谈判的政治考量与时间窗口:罗斯指出,中国领导层将在8月举行重要会议,在此之前不太可能同意有争议的贸易协议。此外,中国不愿在政治上被视为“屈服于特朗普的要求”,这增加了谈判的复杂性。

🈹 关税升级的潜在影响:如果与中国未能达成协议,双方可能恢复之前的经济制裁,美国对中国进口商品的关税可能大幅提高,这将严重影响中国对美出口。尽管中国可能尝试通过其他国家转运来规避关税,但其有效性仍有待观察。

⚖️ 风险的集中与“美国孤立”的担忧:与中国的贸易争端若升级,虽然意味着美国只面临一个贸易战线,但相比于“美国孤立”的局面,风险反而更加集中。罗斯认为,目前的情况使得美国在贸易战方面“处境更好”,因为风险被限定在了与中国的关系上。

Global markets breathed a sigh of relief after the U.S. struck trade deals with the EU and Japan. After all, agreements made with key partners is a far better outcome than many feared on Liberation Day back in April. So between these deals, and Trump’s habit for backing out of threats at the last minute (leading to the so-called TACO trade) one might wonder: Is the worst of the tariff-related volatility behind us?

Not even close, says Wilbur Ross, who served as Commerce Secretary in President Trump’s first administration.

Secretary Ross lauded the White House’s achievements: to sign a handful of deals with global economic forces in a matter of months. But he’s skeptical that the Oval Office’s success thus far will guarantee them a win with America’s major rival, China.

In fact, Secretary Ross wouldn’t be surprised if negotiations slip back into an all-out trade war when a 90-day pause on escalation between the nations expires in the second week of August.

“I’m not so sure that we’ll be able to make a deal with China,” the banker turned D.C. power player tells Fortune in an exclusive interview this week.

“I do think that the Japan deal and the EU deal both put a lot more pressure on China,” he added, but in the short term, Beijing is unlikely to capitulate to America’s demand because of calendar conflicts.

In August, Beijing’s top leaders will reportedly gather in the seaside resort of Beidaihe to agree on key policy and personnel moves. It would be “very unusual for them to do something as controversial as settling with the U.S. just before” such a meeting, Secretary Ross added.

Indeed, while an agreement with the U.S. will make logical sense to Chinese politicians and economists, Secretary Ross said politically, Beijing will not want to be seen as “submitting to Trump’s demands.”

China has been forceful in its response to Trump’s tariff policy, reacting with its own reciprocal measures when the Oval Office announced its own hikes. The tit-for-tat escalation at one point saw the U.S. enforcing an 145% hike on Chinese imports, while Beijing responded with a raise of approximately 125%—all of which were subsequently delayed for 90 days in May.

Officials didn’t mince words about the White House’s agenda and rhetoric, either.

“China’s position has always been consistent: If it’s a fight, we will accompany it to the end; if it’s a talk, our door is open. The tariff war and trade war were unilaterally initiated by the U.S.,” China’s Commerce spokesman said in a statement on May 2. “If the U.S. wants to talk, it must show genuine sincerity—be prepared to correct its wrong practices and cancel the unilateral tariff increases.”

The minister added: “Saying one thing and doing another, or even attempting to use talks as a pretext for coercion and blackmail, will not work with China.”

Despite the spiky rebuffs to Washington’s tactics, Secretary Ross added there have been no suggestions that China will do anything “dramatic.”

“I think there’s a high possibility—not a majority, but say 40-50% possibility, that they’ve decided not to do a deal right now, but just let the high tariffs sit,” he added.

Back to Liberation Day

If President Trump can’t agree to a deal with China in the next fortnight or so, Secretary Ross said markets can expect to see economic sanctions on either side return to the higher levels seen before a pause was agreed those three months ago.

This would “pretty well eliminate Chinese exports to us,” Secretary Ross added. “For the most part, they’re not gonna be able to absorb those tariffs.”

There could be some effort on behalf of China to find a way around the economic sanctions, the former cabinet member added, potentially finding shipping routes via nations with lower tariff rates to America. How President Trump might close this loophole, Secretary Ross said, remains to be seen: “How well that will work I don’t know. We don’t know the exact details of what has been agreed, and that’s a little bit tricky to enforce in any event because it involves the day to day cooperation of another country, so it’ll be a little confusing, but worst case is that we’ll be back where we were before he made his recent postponement with China.”

And while a loggerheads with China isn’t idea, it would mean the U.S. was only fighting a battle on one front as opposed to being left—as JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon had warned—as “America alone.”

While Secretary Ross added markets hadn’t seen the end of market-induced volatility on account of further deals to come, and sector-specific questions still hang over industries like pharmaceuticals and rare earth, he added: “We’re in much better shape because it’s now clear that if there’s gonna be a real trade war with anyone it would just be with China, so it’s limited the risk that we have.”

 

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贸易战 中美贸易 关税 威尔伯·罗斯 全球经济
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