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US 2024 elections and the way to a calamitous trade war

BY DAN STEINBOCK

THE 2024 US election is not just about democracy but about big media, big money, and big defense. It is setting the stage for a new trade war and lethal geopolitics that could destabilize global economic prospects for years to come.

For months, the U.S. presidential race has been hyped by national and international media with its incessant hunger for the latest soundbites, spiced with expert opinions. 

Nonetheless, views don’t make the world go around; money does, especially big money. Polls are shaped by the media. Media is bought by campaigns. Candidates’ views are tailored to and by campaign finance, which is dominated by the powerful interests that make and break most Democratic and Republican campaigns.

Here’s how the US presidential race (really) works.

Trump protectionism and economic coercion

When former president Trump began his first campaign eight years ago, he pledged to end America’s foreign interventionism and focus on the defense of U.S. borders. The big money disagreed. So, Trump coupled his America First protectionism with muscular interventionism. 

The real-estate tycoon has pledged to impose a tariff of 60% or more on Chinese goods building on the reversal of America’s free-trade policies that he implemented in his first term. The stance would likely build on the ideas of Robert Lighthizer, his ex-U.S. trade representative, who would raise tariffs on China, cut off investment between the two countries, and block Chinese social media firms until China’s trade surplus would magically disappear. 

If the stated objective is to reduce the trade deficit with China, the actual effect has been precisely the reverse. Trump’s economic policies and trade protectionism would accelerate the U.S. deficit causing public debt to soar. In 2025, Trump would first trash Biden-Harris geopolitics and then build on it. He would push back on China and rally partners to raise pressure in the South China Sea. 

These policies will destabilize East and Southeast Asia’s economic development. But that’s not Trump’s concern. America First is.

Harris: From America First to American Fist

After stating repeatedly that she “is not Biden,” Harris would largely continue Biden’s trade policy. Effectively, she would retain most of Trump’s tariffs on China while raising some (e.g., electric vehicles). Managed trade would prevail in steel and commercial aircraft with key allies. 

Like Biden, Harris would continue Trump’s blocking of new appointments to the WTO’s dispute-settlement body, thus undermining its enforcement role. 

Supporting across-the-board interventionism, Harris would build on Biden’s Indo-Pacific Economic Framework stressing cooperation on tax, digital trade, and supply chains, without reducing tariffs. Like Biden, she will seek to counter China by strengthening partnerships in the Pacific. 

In particular, Harris is likely to foster the U.S.-Philippines collaboration on the South China Sea. Her administration wants to tie Beijing and Manila into a longstanding conflict to undermine Taiwan’s eventual integration with the Chinese mainland; if necessary, at the cost of the Philippines’ economic and sovereign future. In the big picture, Manila is collateral damage.

Under Harris, the America First stance abroad will be replaced by American Fist; preferably with the support of like-minded military-industrial complexes in Europe and Japan.

From Big Media…

On September 12, Harris scored 47.1% against Trump’s 44.3%. But the race is too close to call. Until the Republican and Democratic conventions in July, Trump had a +3% lead over Biden in a tight race complicated by the independent campaign of Robert F. Kennedy, which garnered 9% of the polls.

After the national conventions – following a great amount of behind-the-façade wheeling and dealing and the financiers’ effective blackmailing – Biden was replaced by his Vice-President Kamala Harris in late July. Meanwhile, Kennedy withdrew from the race and largely joined the Trump camp (Figure 1).

Figure 1.  Too Close to Call

Source: fivethirtyeight

The effects were immediate. At the surface, Harris gained an almost 3% lead over Trump; effectively 6 percentage points. Since Harris represented essentially Biden’s old policies, how was this possible? 

First of all, Kennedy’s strategic move proved less effective than expected because his polls had dwindled to close to 5%. In part, Harris’s catch-up stemmed from an electoral Viagra effect in which a more youthful face ensured the Democratic constituencies a collective relief. The aging Biden was seen as too old for another term in the White House.

But finally, it was shrewd political marketing and media promotion. As Harris took over, Democratic marketers began to hammer the new message, “There’s new energy! There’s new excitement! The campaign is on fire!” 

… to Big Money

Of course, nothing had changed. Through Biden’s first term, Harris had suffered PR nightmares causing her ratings to erode significantly. However, as mainstream media soon embraced the Democrats’ political marketing messages, the tight race boosted ratings allowing these mainstream outlets to gain viewers during national conventions, even over Trump’s attempted-assassination raised-fist iconography (Figure 2). 

Figure 2 Electoral Viagra Effect

The Harris “New Energy!” Campaign

Source: CNN/YouTube; Amazon sales

By late August, the media race was normalizing. With the 2024 Democratic National Convention in the rearview, the status quo among the cable news networks was restored. Fox News recaptured the top spot in total viewers and the adults 25-54 demo. CNN claimed second place, moving ahead of MSNBC in both primetime and total viewers.

Such ratings require lots of money. And in the race, where candidate money is coupled with outside money, Harris’s ($775 million) lead is a whopping 35 percentage points over Trump ($575 million). The big funders of the Harris campaign represent big technology (Alphabet/Google, Microsoft. Amazon, Apple, Meta/Facebook). The big money behind Trump represents billionaires, Israeli-American funders, aerospace and energy money (Figure 3).

Figure 3 Campaign Finance

Blue and red bars represent candidate committee money; the black bar represents outside money.)
Source: Open Secrets

Geopolitical trade wars

As projected by some in the late 2010s, the Trump administration’s embrace of trade protectionism and coercive geopolitics undermined the global recovery. As the Biden administration chose not to reset Trump protectionism, it contributed dramatically to global geoeconomic fragmentation disrupting global growth prospects. 

These are the policies that the Harris administration will build upon and the Trump administration will accelerate. If the effect has been disastrous in the past, it is likely to be worse in the coming years. 

Starting in 2018, Trump’s tariff war targeted mainly Chinese intermediate inputs and capital equipment; that is the mainland’s “world factory.” In the past decade, the Chinese mainland has become a global science and innovation hub, however. As a result, in 2025, the Harris-Trump administrations are likely to target largely the final consumer goods. They hope to protect domestic industries while seeking to avoid imposing costs on their supply chains.

In brief, the US tariff wars will no longer be about protectionism against assembly plants and cheap products. They will try to contain and crush advanced industries and cutting-edge technologies in China. Since this makes little economic sense, China (and other large emerging economies in the Global South) will be increasingly portrayed as “different” and the “other” – as the geopolitical “enemy” par excellence.

Creating “enemies” to hate

For almost half a century, Gallup has polled American views on China. Following Beijing’s 2001 membership in the WTO, these views were initially divided but steadily improved. “Americans have been feeling more positively toward China in recent years,” Gallup stated in 2027, “and now 50% say they have a favorable opinion of that country.”

With the misguided portrayal of China as the enemy, the balance has drastically shifted. Today, 77% of Americans view China unfavorably and only 20% favorably, thanks to the revolving doors between the Pentagon, the State Department and the US military-industrial complex (Figure 4).

Figure 4 Creating an “Enemy”: US Perceptions of China, 1979-2024

Source: Gallup

This unwarranted, manufactured outcome didn’t have to happen. With the continued improvement of US-Chinese ties, global recovery and the rise of the Global South would have become the new norm. But that was not seen in the West’s interest.

The ominous times looming ahead are reflected by the recent passage of two bills (H.R. 1398, H.R. 9456) that seek to reinstate the now-defunct China Initiative and add more restrictions to the current Alien Land Laws. As critics warn, reimplementing the notorious program is likely to create “conditions that fuel anti-Asian violence.”

The political viciousness accompanying the US 2024 presidential race is likely to be followed by more domestic and international turmoil starting in 2025.

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Dr. Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see https://www.differencegroup.net/   The original version was released by China-US Focus on Sept 21, 2024.

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