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Jane Kelsey argues Trump’s tariffs are nothing new, NZ’s real problem is the failing free trade system itself

Public Policy / opinion
Jane Kelsey argues Trump’s tariffs are nothing new, NZ’s real problem is the failing free trade system itself
trump
Getty Images.

By Jane Kelsey*

Headlines following Donald Trump’s election victory focused largely on the influence of personalities, such as Elon Musk or Robert Kennedy junior, and single issues, such as how US tariff hikes would affect New Zealand’s exports.

But this oversimplifies and diverts attention from the more systemic challenges a second Trump presidency will pose for Aotearoa New Zealand’s economy.

Yes, Trump is an unpredictable authoritarian and an economic disruptor. But his policies are not novel and need to be understood in a broader context.

Many of Trump’s trade policies are an extension of recent US-centric strategies to dismantle the global free trade model. Ironically, the US largely created this model, but it no longer serves US objectives.

The international trade regime, and the neoliberal model of free trade in general, now face an existential crisis that New Zealand cannot ignore.

Free trade backlash

Trump’s tool of choice for trade policy is high tariffs or border taxes, which make imports more expensive. His agenda is driven by two factors:

  • increasing production and jobs in the US domestic economy and incentivising foreign firms to invest within the US border to avoid tariffs

  • geopolitically, using super-tariffs to undercut China’s rise as a competing power.

Neither objective is new. The tariffs Trump imposed in his previous term, especially on China, were largely continued under Joe Biden. They were part of a broader backlash against free trade agreements in the US.

Trump withdrew the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA). The Biden administration did not rejoin and eschewed the Democrats’ traditional approach to free trade.

Biden’s Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) promoted non-tariff strategies designed to boost US industrial, investment and security interests in Asia. Its “friend-shoring” approach aimed to strengthen economic and foreign policy alliances, including with New Zealand, while eroding China’s influence, especially over critical supply chains in the region.

Interestingly, Trump condemned the IPEF (incorrectly) as a reincarnation of the TPPA, so its fate remains uncertain.

WTO in crisis

There has been a similar cross-party convergence on US challenges to the “rules-based” international trade regime. Both Democrat and Republican administrations have systematically undermined the World Trade Organization (WTO), claiming it no longer serves US interests.

Successive US administrations, starting with Barack Obama’s, have paralysed the WTO’s two-tier dispute system by refusing to appoint new Appellate Body members. This means they can break the WTO rules with impunity – including by imposing unilateral tariff sanctions.

At this year’s WTO Public Forum in September, people were openly discussing the existential crisis in the organisation and possible responses if the US disengages completely.

Bipartisan agreement: Joe Biden continued trade policies enacted during the first Trump presidency. Getty Images.

Breakdown of rules

This is just one part of the WTO’s institutional disintegration. The Doha Development Round, launched in 2001, had effectively collapsed by 2008.

In large part, this was over the Agreement on Agriculture. Its foundations were laid in 1993 by the so-called Blair House Accord, which ensured the US and European Union did not have to reduce (and could continue to increase) subsidies for their farmers. They insisted that continue.

Meanwhile, the US and EU stymied demands from developing countries for alternative “safeguard” and “public stockholding” arrangements to support their farmers and ensure food security.

The US, EU and others blocked a waiver of intellectual property rights that would have ensured affordable access to vaccines, diagnostics and supplies during the COVID-19 (and future) pandemics.

Subsets of members, including New Zealand, have ignored the WTO’s own rules to negotiate plurilateral agreements without a mandate, and seek to dilute the “consensus” rule to have them adopted. Ironically, the main opponents, India and South Africa, are labelled the “blockers” for standing up for the WTO rules.

New Zealand’s challenge

So, the crises in the international trade regime (and the neoliberal model of free trade) predate Trump’s first term.

But successive New Zealand governments have put all their eggs in the “free trade” basket of the WTO and regional and bilateral trade agreements.

Current Trade Minister Todd McClay seems determined to secure new agreements as rapidly as possible, illustrated by the 100-day negotiation of a recent deal with the United Arab Emirates under strict secrecy and with minimal scrutiny.

The previous Labour government pragmatically engaged in the IPEF more as a geopolitical alliance with the US than as a trade forum, despite New Zealand’s export dependency on China and the lack of any clear economic benefits.

So far, the reaction to Trump’s re-election from government ministers, business, farmers and news media has given an impression of business as usual, albeit with the threat of unhelpful US tariffs. But what is really needed is a far-reaching debate about the risks of a failing international trade system.

New Zealand’s export share of GDP has not changed meaningfully over the past few decades, despite more than two-thirds of New Zealand’s exports being covered by free trade agreements. The primary problem is not a lack of markets, but rather firms’ export capability, weak innovation, and an over-reliance on low-value-added commodities.

The now-disbanded Productivity Commission’s work on improving economic resilience urged New Zealand to tackle head-on the challenges of an increasingly uncertain and volatile economic and geopolitical world.

That apparently fell on deaf ears. But Trump’s re-election is an opportunity to open that debate and confront those challenges.The Conversation


*Jane Kelsey, Emeritus Professor of Law, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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51 Comments

Jane is always good value

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7

She's more 'socialist worker' than 'Limits to Growth', but she's never been accused of ignorance. 

The disintegration - Trump or no Trump - is accelerating for demand/depletion/competition/degradation reasons; that combo is too big to offset, too big to counter, and too big to stop until it self-annihilates. 

It's like watching a slow-motion train-wreck. A good book is: The Rise and Fall of American Growth (Robert Gordon). Mike Moore was on the wrong track - a falsely-based ideology, in hindsight. 

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1

Interesting point about NZ not following WTO rules when we push for plurilateral agreements. I've never heard this in any NZ mainstream coverage, which seems to feed off MFAT press releases.

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6

As the article says, the Doha round has effectively failed, therefore progress on free trade has halted. It’s much easier to obtain bi/multilateral agreements than to get the all WTO members on the same page, hence many countries are working on other agreements which technically are against WTO rules as they favour some countries over others, creating distortions and are considered inferior to free trade among all nations if it can ever be achieved.

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0

"New Zealand has weak aggregate productivity performance, relying on growth in the labour input to
drive headline GDP growth."

Or to put it another way, New Zealand doesn't farm 'stuff' it farms people. Or more precisely, the Debt those people incur to drive GDP 'growth'.

"New Zealand has debated economic transformation for decades, but has not made much progress."

And neither will there be if we keep doing as we have been doing - Debt farming more people. And when the wheels come off; the NZ$ plunges as a result and the only means of 'saving' the exchange rate is an unthinkable rise in % rates, then we will realise how negligent we (every politician elected by...US)  have been. Because the only driver of our economy - Debt - is going to get mighty expensive to service.

(from the captioned Skilling Report)

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16

We used to subsidise animal farming. Now we subsidise people farming. The Queen Street farmers are always the winners.

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6

Our per-capita GDP is a more refined measure than GDP, and we are going backwards faster than GDP indicates: https://thefacts.nz/gdp/

It argues even more strongly that we plug the gap by just adding people to poor systems we don't invest in, or have the scale to improve.

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0

We have innovative firms like rocket lab, Xero, Zuru, all birds. But how much does that contribute to our exports when it’s necessary to set up offices and production overseas?

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1

Therein lies the problem with globalization. You need scale to be competitive, and NZ lacks the critical mass to scale most industries that aren't reliant on our geographical location.

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7

Cost of land for warehousing and production too, horrific here because of the property ponzi scheme.

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2

Under trump,  rates are starting to move UP again,  adding to that is the Fed's comments this morning.. this is going to further restrain nz's economic growth..

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7

Yes, WTO intentions have been thwarted by many, many of its members since its inception. When the US stops paying its dues it will probably close up:

United States of America 23,206,206 11.426%

https://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/secre_e/budget_e.htm

As far as the question of what NZ should do in this post-neoliberal/post Washington Consensus environment, I'd say strengthen NZCER; strengthen harmonisation of our laws and regulations; strengthen any other bilateral initiatives with AUS.  Perhaps go for a single currency.

We're going to see the USD hegemony end as well - so we need to pay more attention to BRICS and AUD will fare better than most when that happens.  Its got more stuff the world is prepared to pay a high (and scarcity) value for.  The more we align with them in all aspects of sovereign cooperation, the better.

 

 

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8

 "Perhaps go for a single currency."

No

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3

Got a reasoned argument to go with that there kneejerk, frankie?

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3

If we are foolish enough to voluntarily relinquish our ability to issue sovereign currency then why would you choose one that is only used in 3% of global trade ahead of the global reserve?....what advantages would it bring?

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4

Monetary sovereignty is priceless.

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15

We already relinquished monetary sovereignty to private commercial banks?

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3

Lol...sort of, but we can always take it back if we so decide.

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2

I can do better than a reasoned arguement, I have a video   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_oET45GzMI&t=273s

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1

Better yet, just become a state of Australia. 

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6

One way trip.

"The Constitution of Australia, however, describes the union as "one indissoluble Federal Commonwealth" and makes no provision for states to secede."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secessionism_in_Western_Australia#

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2

Easier just to move there, and holiday here

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1

It's been talked about in the past: but why would Australia want us?

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0

The experience in Europe illustrates well why a single currency is not preferred. It removes the natural counterbalancing mechanism of a floating currency that helps keep spending splurges not supported by domestic production in check somewhat (i.e low exports -> dollar falls -> imports become more expensive -> imports fall. Also works the other way)

Additionally loss of monetary sovereignty is huge, and ultimately can lead to sovereign debt crises.

Losing both these mechanisms is a partial explanation for the issues in Greece and other Eurozone countries following the GFC. Greece could spend up large, run large current account deficits, and the currency never 'corrects' as German exports far outweigh the Greek influence on the Euro. Then, once they'd backed themselves into a corner, they did not have the option of monetary easing to gradually inflate away the debt, therefore leading to a crisis.

 

The only way it makes sense to lose monetary sovereignty imo is if we did so via completely joining Australia, which would of course avoid the above issues.

 

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4

Except it dosnt avoid the above issues, as the US demonstrates....monetary policy is not run to the benefit of the individual states, but for the whole (some would argue, it is run for the benefit of the 1%)....consequently you have issues such as the 'rust belt', aka the Greece and Portugal of the U.S.

And the larger the entity the more scope for disparity of outcome.

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5

Current Trade Minister Todd McClay seems determined to secure new agreements as rapidly as possible, illustrated by the 100-day negotiation of a recent deal with the United Arab Emirates under strict secrecy and with minimal scrutiny.

We're way behind the likes of Vietnam in terms of economic / trade relationships with the UAE. The UAE sees Vietnam as a partner in terms of food supply and production. And both sides understand quid pro quo. A large supermarket chain in the UAE is planning to help Vietnam modernize its retail sector as part of the relationship. With different retailers from the UAE, Korea, Japan, and domestic, this has huge benefits for the Vietnamese consumer - a competitive environment keeps prices down. Something Aotearoa doesn't understand.

https://www.moec.gov.ae/en/-/uae-and-vietnam-discuss-strengthening-of-e…   

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0

The UAE is always keen to do deals.  It understands the need to diversify and broaden its economy away from excessive reliance on one or two basic commodities.  It actually has several almost entirely separate economies - Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and the rest; with only AD having oil - the common link is all have been open to trade for much longer than the soverign entity has existed.  Of course UAE has geographic advantages NZ doesn't, but Dubai in particular is a good example of the benefits of open trade

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0

What sort of professional article writer would put this in an article? authoritarian is he, so unprofessional to write this sort of thing. How about stick to the topic and stop the mud slinging. 

 

"Yes, Trump is an unpredictable authoritarian and an economic disruptor. But his policies are not novel and need to be understood in a broader context."

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2

Yes he is an authoritarian leader. As per wikipedia:

Authoritarianism is a political system characterized by the rejection of political plurality, the use of strong central power to preserve the political status quo, and reductions in democracy, separation of powers, civil liberties, and the rule of law.

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7

Before 'politics', it was and always has been authoritarian rule - monarchies, emperor's, the church. Changing the title to president, prime minister, the party, does not change this. The military, corporations, schools, are effectively authoritarian. There is still a lot of emphasis placed on authority. It's our history.

"Democracy" was just a nice illusion. The citizens would be happier being able to choose their ruler.

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1

Is it a matter of style? Compare the police in NZ with the police in certain other countries - in both cases they have power over the citizen but in NZ they ask politely and say please before using their taser. Jacinda wanted to be liked as a kind person but it didn't stop her imposing lock downs.

Nothing wrong with the government having authority otherwise nothing serious gets done. A successful amateur sports team may choose a captain and fully expect the captain to 'lay down the law'.

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2

Wikipedia? Really. Let's stop and think for a moment. The Trump popular movement is doubling down on the US Constitution ie on conducting government in a constitutional manner with the rights to every citizen as enshrined in that Constitution. One of Trump's top priorities is to ensure that mass media and social media never acts again to curtail, block or shadow ban the free speech of citizens - ie to enforce the First Amendment of the above mentioned Constitution. The claim that Trump - and his nominees for Cabinet - are here to "preserve the political status quo" is something that maybe you should talk to the Washington DC establishment about. John Bolton and his DC institutional ilk are utterly horrified at Trump's picks.  

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0

"One of Trump's top priorities is to ensure that mass media and social media never acts again to curtail, block or shadow ban the free speech of citizens"

Appears draining the swamp really means refilling it with bullsh!t. 

 https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/1/16/20991816/impeachment-…

Fascists don't even make it a secret. 

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5

Not really. You can allege he would be authoritarian if he could. But there’s not real evidence of this during his last term. He didn’t abuse executive orders any more than Obama did.

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0

Off the leash now though.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2024/jul/01/supreme-…

The adults have left the Trump circus. 4 years of Whitehouse reality TV on the way. 

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1

He is absolutely authoritarian.  Resisting leaving power last time was evidence enough, but Americans will unfortunately learn the hard way that they have voted for the end of their democracy.

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1

"increasing production and jobs in the US domestic economy and incentivising foreign firms to invest within the US border to avoid tariffs"

The unemployment rate has very rarely been lower than now since the 50's (see https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/unemployment-rate).

Why would you want to force businesses to use labour for unskilled jobs that can be done overseas much cheaper when you don't have an unemployment problem? Won't this seriously decrease productivity?

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2

You need to take into account the workforce participation rate, and also the "shadow stats" rate which uses more original and realistic definitions of employment (eg. receiving one hour of paid work does not count as being employed). 

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0

When our unemployment rate got into the 3s we had labour shortages, every shop had help wanted signs in the window. An unemployment rate in the low 4s is very close to full employment. 

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1

Jane Kelsey has been cheering for the collapse of free trade and neo-liberalism for decades. Finally she thinks that is in sight, and it is all thanks to Donald Trump. What a crazy conclusion.

Kind of like an anti-monarchist looking to a newly crowned king to end monarchy.

Sorry Jane, capitalism (which the socialists have tried to re-label as "neo-liberalism") is alive and well, and it ain't going away, ever.

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3

Capitalism hasn't been the core problem since the 1970s. Global multinationals and global corporate finance/banking (the "FIRE" sector) has been. Quite different.

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8

Which is capitalism on steroids. Referred to by many as late stage/end stage capitalism. It was foreseen and predicted.

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4

Well let's treat the disease correctly - one doesn't treat mild early stage disease in the same way as one approaches late stage (possibly terminal) disease.

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1

We don't know how to treat this dis-ease. We're not willing to hence it became terminal.

Capitalism is effectively a reflection...

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1

About right: deathless organisations that acknowledge no national boundaries and whose makeup is of replaceable parts.

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0

Wrong. 
We had capitalism until the early 1980s. Since then we have had neoliberal capitalism. We had liberal capitalism in the Victorian era. Hence ‘neoliberalism’ in the modern era.

Also, what a logical fallacy you have provided there  - Trump ends neoliberalism, therefore Trump is good if you dislike neoliberalism. Nope!

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4

They’re not mutually exclusive labels. Capitalism is a mode of production. Neoliberalism is suite of policies based on markets.

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4

Capitalism is a mode of extraction. 

Neoliberalism is a suite of policies which assumes an infinite planet, no waste-stream and that one species has transcended the rules of ecology. 

Which it hasn't. 

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1

Some more detailed information on the nature of what occupations the work permits were issued for would be very useful. Are we importing skills or simply more hands?

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0

Are we importing skills or simply more hands?

You're asking the wrong question!  The question is, "Do you have 70k?"  Skills don't come into it, we're simply selling permanent residence.

Immigration adviser on tape offering job for $70k | RNZ News

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0

"Skills don't come into it, we're simply selling permanent residence."

In the example given 'we' arnt 'selling' anything....the money to pay the NZ resident will come from our economy....it may be fair to say we are selling residency if the immigrant paid the NZ gov with offshore funds for the residency visa.

We are so desperate/ stupid to maintain our property ponzi that we allow migrants to be exploited by NZ citizens/residents (not to mention the offshore agents) 

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0