The
IW, which is financed by prominent German business associations
and carries weight among Berlin policymakers, published the
paper a day ahead of "Super Tuesday", the day in the U.S.
presidential primary cycle when the most states vote.
The front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination has
proposed slapping a 10% tariff on all imports and hiking those
on Chinese imports by 40 percentage points to 60% were he to
defeat President Joe Biden in the Nov. 5 U.S. election.
This tariff shock would temporarily shave 1-1.4% off U.S.
economic output in the early years mainly due to higher consumer
prices and unemployment weighing on consumption and a confidence
shock that would affect investment in the short term, according
to the IW study.
But improvements in the trade and fiscal balance would allow
U.S. gross domestic product to recover to be only slightly
negative by 2028.
The impact on Europe and particularly on export-oriented
countries like Germany would be much more severe, according to
the IW study, even as they already struggle with high energy
prices and a lack of skilled labor.
German GDP would drop by 1.2% by 2028, hit by the fall in
exports and a subsequent drop in private investment, the study
showed. If China were to retaliate with its own 40 percentage
point hike in import duties, it could drop as far as 1.4%.
"The EU should prepare for such a scenario now," the IW warned.
"The EU should use the remaining term of President Biden to put
the trade relations with the US on a more solid footing."
This would entail institutionalizing the EU-U.S. Trade and
Technology Council, signing a critical minerals agreement as
well as concluding a deal on the trade of green steel and
aluminum, it said.
The EU should also sign more free trade agreements with partners
such as Australia, the Mercosur, Indonesia, or India.
"Second, if Trump was elected and would threaten to implement
new trade barriers against the EU, the EU should be able to
react," the IW said. "To counter such a threat, the EU should
also threaten credible retaliation."
(Reporting by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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