Can Trade Save Obama?

Europe’s seemingly never-ending crisis is bound to hijack this week’s G-20 Summit in Cannes, which begins on Thursday. As a source of global economic havoc, Europe’s problems are the G-20’s problems. That’s just fine with many G-20 economies, as Europe’s woes cast them as white knights capable of rescuing the Old Continent with their mass reserves — and deflects attention from uncomfortable issues such as currency manipulation. But the crisis threatens to divert the G-20’s attention from the day after — and the urgent challenge of ensuring sustained global growth. And that still requires global rebalancing.

Unlike the bullish forecasts of some analysts in the wake of the 2008-09 global financial crisis, emerging markets such as Brazil and China have not created a new global "supercycle" of widespread growth and prosperity. Instead of "decoupling" from the advanced economies, they too have proven hostage to the transatlantic economic morass, as exports slow and markets rumble. Yet emerging economies also now hold the keys to a better world. Armed with capital, they could help bail out Europe; by stimulating domestic demand, they could catalyze export-led growth in the United States.

If there is a silver bullet for U.S. recovery, it is exports. It was U.S. manufacture exports that paved the way to the 2.5 percent U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the most recent quarter; without exports, the U.S. economy would have expanded by a negligible 0.2 percent instead of the estimated 2 percent in the first quarter. Exports generate jobs: A 10 percent increase in export sales produces a 7 percent increase in employment, according to labor economist Lori Kletzer — double the 3.5 percent that a 10 percent increase in domestic sales produce. And exports help cut America’s trade deficit, allaying protectionist calls for tariffs on foreign products.

In the coupled world economy, a vigorous America propels global growth. Reviving U.S. exports would also resolve a perilous paradox: The globalized world economy the United States has assiduously built in the past six decades is now viewed as a menace in America itself. Cheap imports are seen to have failed the American worker; globalization is blamed for blunting Washington’s fiscal and monetary levers. Such fears are jet fuel for growing American isolationism — when the absence of alternative leaders demands renewed American stewardship.

In a world where almost 80 percent of global consumption comes from outside U.S. borders and exports make up only 13 percent of U.S. GDP, far below the levels of such seasoned traders as Germany or Japan, American exports have room to expand. But expansion is easier said than done: Washington’s calls (particularly for China) to increase domestic consumption, tighten intellectual property protections, and cease currency manipulation are falling on deaf ears. Even the carrots and sticks that persuaded cantankerous Japanese policymakers in the 1980s — security guarantees and threats of sanctions — would not sway Beijing. And without enforcement mechanisms to make G-20 members swallow the medicine they prescribe themselves — macroeconomic and trade policies that would deliver a more balanced world economy — the U.S.-sponsored G-20 rebalancing agenda is toothless.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration’s plans to promote exports consist of much talk but little action. The best President Obama has mustered toward his goal of doubling U.S. exports — the passage of trade deals negotiated by the Bush administration with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea — promises welcome yet limited export gains. And congressional Democrats’ call for tariffs against China in retaliation for its currency manipulation risks 1930s-style global trade wars.

A fresh approach is needed, one aimed at opening new markets and building external pressure on Beijing to change its ways. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) that Washington is pursuing with eight small Asia-Pacific markets, four of which have already signed free-trade agreements with the United States, needs Japan and South Korea as well as the largest Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) as members if it is to deliver trade gains and strategic leverage vis-à-vis China. The president’s personal involvement would make a difference. Trade deals with Brazil, the world’s sixth largest economy, and India, the billion-consumer ally that feels shunned by Washington’s Sino-centricism and is in trade talks with Europe, would be similar game changers.

With most nations queasy about Beijing’s trade policies, Washington can use China’s unpopularity to its advantage by convincing others to take the high ground and invest in the rules-based international economic order, from firmer investor and intellectual property protections to averting the siren calls of capital controls and currency wars, the handmaidens of trade protectionism.

There is high ground to be claimed back home as well: Cuts in wasteful U.S. farm subsidies could jumpstart the dormant Doha Round and rescue the U.S.-built global trading system from terminal damage. The focus also needs to move from inside-the-Beltway streamlining of the 16-agency trade bureaucracy to America’s small and mid-size enterprises (SMEs). Unlike large multinationals that by now can puff up the export pie only at the margins, SMEs are an army of exporters-in-waiting. They are also engines of jobs: Two out of three new American jobs are created by companies younger than five years old. Thus far, only 3 percent of America’s 30 million SMEs export, and 1 percent, or 280,000, make up 80 percent of all SME exports — and most sell to just one or two markets.

Yet it is SMEs that also face the greatest obstacles, from counsel to capital, to go global. Such measures as greater resources from the U.S. Commercial Service that finds partners for U.S. companies abroad and stronger incentives for trade-finance lenders to cater to small business are needed to fire up these latent exporters. Even in an election year, boosting small-business exports makes for a bipartisan plank.

As all countries look to increase exports to spur growth, currency wars and protectionist posturing will likely continue. The way out is neither quick nor easy. At the end of the day, East Asia must give some on currencies and consumption. But instead of waiting for others to come around, Washington must reclaim its trade agenda — and accelerate America’s transformation from a continental to a global economy, one that, rather than reverting from the world it created, now reaps its promise.