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The myth of deglobalization

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The pandemic and the war in Ukraine have brought into sharp focus problems associated with global trade.

The Economist Michael O’Sullivan argues in his new book “The Leveling: What’s Next After Globalization” that globalization is dead. As long-standing scholars of globalization and competitiveness, our response to that alleged demise was uttered most appropriately 122 years ago by American writer and humorist Mark Twain, who exclaimed: “The rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated”.

The counter-arguments to globalization’s death must be understood within the context of the current economic milieu, the resurgence of populist politics, the changing nature of trade and the evolution of global production systems and supply chains.

Admittedly, the world economy is in a period of contraction. The World Trade Organization has slashed its forecast for trade growth for this year and next. World trade in merchandise is now expected to expand by only 1.2 percent during 2019 — less than half what was predicted in April. In the business realm, the Institute for Supply Management reported that its manufacturing index fell to 47.8 in September, the lowest level since June 2009. An indicator less than 50 means contraction that raises costs for business and consumers.  

Nevertheless, none of these numbers indicates a trend towards deglobalization. Actually, global GDP is growing, thanks to China. In fact, world trade overall has increased from 39 percent of GDP in 1990 to 58 percent last year and now represents a larger share of U.S. output, with foreign sales comprising a growing share of U.S. corporate profits. Recognizably, there has been a dip in the trade numbers since the 2008 Great Recession, from 61 percent to 58 percent, and a fall in intermediate inputs from 19 percent to 17 percent; but these declines are hardly significant. 

Unquestionably the worldwide economic contraction we are witnessing can be attributed as much to politics, in the form of nationalism and populism, as to economics. The U.S. has been in the vanguard of protectionism, according to many, while others assert that the Trump administration is merely seeking fair rules and a leveling of the playing field.

President Trump tweeted in July of last year: “Tariffs are the greatest!” But U.S. tariffs on over $300 billion of Chinese exports have triggered retaliatory tariffs of 20 percent by China (versus only 8 percent that China levies on other nations), higher prices for consumers and the cost of welfare payments to U.S. farmers to compensate them in part for their export losses due to China’s retaliatory tariffs on the U.S.

Whatever one’s perspective, intensifying trade conflicts threaten jobs and livelihoods and dissuade companies from expanding and innovating. U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership; tariff wars with China and trade conflicts with Mexico, Canada and other key trading partners (not to mention the EU’s anxiety over the UK’s withdrawal from the union (Brexit)) have created high anxiety and uncertainty among trading nations. 

Stepping back from the numbers, any objective assessment of deglobalization – and globalization in general – must recognize that cross-border trade in manufactured goods cannot be the only, or even most important, measurement tool.

Measures of globalization and trade, in general, focus on manufactured goods, yet services comprise the most robust, fastest-growing and dynamic sector of the economy, worldwide. In the case of the U.S., foreigners who visit our country and study at our universities as well as consulting, engineering, and accounting firms operating abroad (Accenture, Bechtel, KPMG) are correctly classified as U.S. exports.

The deglobalization argument also does not account for start-ups, later-stage companies and supporting firms and cross-border data flows. As writers Shawn Donnan Lauren Leatherby point out, we are living in a new era in which data is the new shipping container.

Nor does deglobalization consider one of the most revolutionary trends of all during the last two decades — the explosion of middle- and lower-class consumers, especially in emerging markets. This economic dividend means that local firms of all sizes that focused largely on export markets have been increasingly turning inward because of a growing domestic market; their own people can afford their products.

Prudent economic policies, especially low levels of inflation and access to capital, have also enabled domestic manufacturers and suppliers to upgrade their capabilities, thereby facilitating local sourcing (at the expense of foreign imports). This means that the domestic producer of electrical machinery can now source a larger amount of inputs for manufacturing from a local company instead of importing them.

Are we deglobalizing? No. There may be a stall, interruptions and setbacks in the flow of global trade, investment, finance and the migration of human capital. But the juggernaut of globalization, beginning with the trade links between Sumer and the Indus Valley Civilization in the third millennium B.C., will continue. Simply stated: Rumors of its demise lack foundation — globalization is here to stay.

Jerry Haar is a professor of international business at Florida International University and a global fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. Ricardo Ernst is the Baratta Chair in Global Business and co-director of the Global Logistics Research program in the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University Their latest book is “Globalization, Competitiveness and Governability.”

Tags Accenture Deglobalization Donald Trump Globalization Protectionism Tariff Trans-Pacific Partnership Trans-Pacific Partnership WTO

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