A new blueprint for US trade: Building a more resilient, sustainable, and competitive economy

Juhi Dhawan, PhD, Macro Strategist
2023-12-31
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With divided government in the US sure to limit the prospects for new legislation, trade policy is likely to be a key area of focus for the Biden administration over the next two years. At the annual meeting of the National Association for Business Economics in October, I had the opportunity to speak with US Trade Representative Katherine Tai and I came away with five conclusions that encapsulate shifting US trade priorities and could have important economic implications.

1. Free-trade agreements concerned solely with liberalization and tariff elimination are history. Instead, the pillars of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, launched in 2022, would seem to be a better indication of the new direction of US trade policy: Along with the traditional trade pillar (in this case, focused on the digital economy), the stated priorities include supply chains, infrastructure, decarbonization, and governance. The last includes effective tax and anticorruption policies as its goals. This innovative framework brings together 14 nations, representing 40% of global GDP and 60% of the world population. I will be keeping an eye on how this evolves in 2023, especially as the US tries to reposition its trade footprint in Asia away from China.

2. The decoupling of the US and China will remain top of mind. Acknowledging that the two countries are in competition with each other, Ambassador Tai explained the use of Section 301 tariffs as a tool for level-setting the policy field. This tool would serve to facilitate the strategic realignment of priorities given the buildup of issues around intellectual property, innovation, and technology transfers with China over time, suggesting less room to maneuver in bringing these tariffs meaningfully lower. The review of these tariffs is ongoing, and the public has been given the chance to weigh in. I would expect to hear a lot more on this issue, perhaps early in 2023 now that the mid-term elections are behind us. 

3. Trade policy is now more focused on standards and not strictly on market access. The Biden trade agenda includes goals related to sustainability, inclusion, and resiliency. This administration has found allies in Europe for sustainability and inclusion goals and in emerging markets for goals related to inclusion, as well as investments required for the rerouting of supply chains and the buildout of infrastructure. The US/EU Trade and Technology Council, launched in 2021 to enhance competitiveness, fosters collaboration with allies on issues like labor and the environment, which are critical to sustainable trade policy.

4. US trade policy could now serve as a complement to US industrial policy. This means the costs of past trade liberalization efforts, such as fragile supply chains, de-industrialization, offshoring, and the decimation of manufacturing communities, would be considered as a counterbalance to market access. As industrial policy rebalances, trade policy, which sits at the nexus of domestic and foreign policy, also adapts. Note how the pillars of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework encompass the goals of sustainability, inclusion, and resiliency, which also drove the passage of the CHIPS Act, the Infrastructure bill, and the Inflation Reduction Act (US industrial policy).

5. Enforcing trade rules is an area of focus for the administration. Since the passage of the US/Mexico/Canada Agreement (USMCA), more legal cases have been brought up to ensure that the letter of the law is followed in practice. Recall that the USMCA includes both labor and environmental protection clauses. We’re likely to see similar scrutiny around deals with the rest of the world.

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