Gulf Today

US ECONOMY IS A SUCCESS REGARDLESS OF TRUMP POLICIES

- BY HAMISH MCRAE

Another week of trade turmoil. Following the imposition of US tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from Canada and the EU during the week and a disagreeab­le G7 finance ministers’ meeting in Whistler, Canada, on Friday, the focus shifts to China.

US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross arrived on Saturday in Beijing to see what China is prepared to do to cut the surplus from $375bn (£281bn) last year to … well, who knows, but a target of $200bn has been mentioned. The threat if China does not do what the administra­tion wants is a 25 per cent tariff on China’s high-tech US exports.

Leave aside whether the US is justified in its attempt to narrow trade imbalances such as the one with China or indeed with the EU and leave aside too whether it is going the right way about it. Focus on something else. The US economy is a huge success story. You can have a debate about trade policy, but you can’t deny that the American boom has legs. We got a feeling for that on Friday. Start with jobs.

Unemployme­nt in the US is now down to 3.8 per cent, the lowest since 2000 and equal to the lowest since the late 1960s. More remarkable still, the gap between white unemployme­nt and black unemployme­nt is the narrowest certainly since then, maybe longer. It is down to 2.1 percentage points (black unemployme­nt is 5.9 per cent).

So, despite the long expansion, now the second-longest since the Second World War, the economy is putting on pace. Estimates for second quarter growth have been pushed up to an annual rate of 4.8 per cent by one of the Fed’s 12 constituen­t banks, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. This may turn out to be too high, but if you look at all the other stuff – consumer sales, constructi­on orders, car output and so on – there is no doubt that the economy is growing at around 4 per cent. That is faster than the country’s long-term sustainabl­e rate, so the question is: how long can it go on?

Quite a long time, according to Jamie Dimon, head of the bank Jpmorgan Chase, in a speech on Friday. Wages are at last picking up, which should sustain consumers and while interest rates will rise, the Fed is not going to push them up faster than the economy will bear. Someday, we all know, there will be another recession. But it is not yet in sight. In my mind a lot depends on how low unemployme­nt can go without GENERATING wage-push Inflation.

Anyway, however you slice it, America is on a roll. That has political consequenc­es. Internatio­nally it is perhaps making the present administra­tion more self-confident in its trade negotiatio­ns. Domestical­ly it will strengthen the Republican­s in the midterm election. The longer the boom continues, the harder it is to attack the president’s economic policies – though personally I think it is nuts to give the country a fiscal boost in the middle of a boom. The danger, of course, is that the president will overplay his hand. But right now the hand does look a strong one and one that will become stronger in the months ahead.

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