Friday, January 20, 2017
Economic expectations for Sg: 2016 with US changes
https://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/singapore-expect-now-trump-president-034815104.html
This is What Singapore Can
Expect Now That Trump is President
Now that
Donald Trump is the U.S. president, the world will now see if he was all rice
and no chicken on the campaign trail. If he does follow through on everything
he promised to do, Singapore will be one of the countries impacted the most.
This is
because Singapore’s economy relies on trade like few other nations on earth.
This is shown by the total trade as a percentage of GDP number – the higher the
number, the more open a country is to international trade… and the more
important trade is to that country’s economy.
Trade
through Singapore accounted for 326% of the country’s GDP in 2015 – the
third-highest ratio in the world, after Hong Kong and Luxembourg. In fact, that
figure has been at 300% or higher for Singapore since 1976, according to data
from the World Bank (except for 1986 when it was 295%).
With that
in mind, here are three ways Singapore could be “trumped” by the new American
president.
- Less attention from the U.S.
The U.S.
is Singapore’s fourth-largest trading partner as measured by total trade
(imports plus exports). Trade between the two countries is dominated by the
exchange of different kinds of machinery and commercial services. The chances
are good that as President Trump focuses more on domestic matters, and on
alienating China, the U.S. government will pay less attention to the rest of
Asia. The days of President Obama’s so-called “Asia pivot” – entailing a
renewed and refreshed focus on the continent – are long gone.
- More trade with Asia
In
October 2015, the U.S. government signed the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
along with 11 other nations, including Singapore, Australia, Malaysia and
Japan. The TPP’s goal was to make it easier for the participating countries to
trade with each other by removing trade tariffs and lowering importing and
exporting costs between members.
But
Donald Trump said the TPP was “a terrible deal” for the U.S. Then, shortly
after winning the U.S. presidential election, Trump announced that one of the
first things he will do as president is withdraw from the TPP. Without U.S.
involvement, the deal is dead.
That
means easier access to the giant U.S. consumer market for countries like
Singapore will not get any easier. And if Trump starts imposing higher tariffs
on goods from Asia, it will slow down trade even further.
But soon
after Trump promised to withdraw from the TPP, Chinese president Xi Jinping
said that “China will not shut the door to the outside world but will open it
even wider.” In other words, China is set to fill the void left by the U.S.
easing up on globalisation. And it already has deals in place – all of which
involve Singapore – that could nearly match the TPP in size.
For
instance, China is a leading member of the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP). This is a trade agreement between the 10 ASEAN countries (which
includes Singapore) and the six countries with which ASEAN has existing FTAs –
this includes China, Australia, Japan and New Zealand.
This deal
is still being negotiated. If it happens, the RCEP will be a mega trade deal.
The 16 countries involved account for more than a quarter of global trade and a
quarter of global GDP. Plus, with China, India and Indonesia involved, it would
cover almost half of the world’s population.
China is
also developing the One-Belt, One-Road initiative, which is an effort to create
a modern-day Silk Road. The proposed infrastructure will more tightly connect
the continent of Asia to Europe and parts of Africa. One estimate suggests that
this will end up costing about US$8 trillion. It will allow China to trade more
easily with the majority of the world’s population.
Singapore
hopes to play a key role in this initiative. Not only is it a key part of the
Maritime Silk Road portion of the plan, but Singapore also hopes China will use
it as a platform to reach out to Southeast Asia and the rest of the world.
So even
with the potential of less trade with the U.S., Singapore could still benefit
from better trade relationships with its Asian neighbours.
- More uncertainty
It used
to be that in developed markets (like the U.S., Europe, and Japan), things were
comfortable and easy, and there weren’t many surprises. Politics didn’t matter
much to share prices.
And then
there were crazy emerging markets (like most of Latin America, Africa, and much
of Asia), the wild west of investing, where anything could happen. Bad politics
could erase years of market gains in a matter of moments.
When I
worked for a political risk consulting company a few years ago, we would talk
about how an emerging market was one where politics mattered to markets. That
meant that personalities (that is, the people in power) were bigger than, and
more important than, the institutions those people headed up. Who’s president,
what the parliament is doing, what kind of people are making policy – all of
that could be the difference between making or breaking a market.
And this
is still true in emerging markets, like Brazil and South Africa and Malaysia
and Russia. Who the president is and what crazy things he’s doing can
completely change the business and investment environment.
The big
change is that developed markets are looking a lot more like emerging markets
when it comes to politics. From Germany to Japan to the U.S., politics in many
developed markets are a lot more polarised than they’ve ever been before.
Different sides don’t want to talk – they only want to yell. And after a while,
a strong personality harnesses one part of this polarisation. That’s what can
threaten institutions. And that’s a big risk.
This is
what we see happening with the popularity of Donald Trump. Even in a developed
market like the U.S., personalities are becoming bigger than the institutions
they inhabit (like the presidency). If personalities can change those
institutions for the better, it’s a good thing. But it’s a big risk – as the
history of many countries in emerging markets has shown.
This type
of uncertainty in the world’s most developed market, the U.S., could translate
into more volatile markets everywhere. And that includes Singapore.
So with
Trump now in the White House, Singaporeans can expect to see more market
volatility, less interest from the U.S. and a bump in trade with the rest of
Asia.
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