G20 leaders drop protectionism pledge

Finance ministers from 20 world powers have dropped their pledge to oppose trade protectionism in the face of opposition from the United States.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble speaks during a news conference at the G20 Finance Ministers and Bank Governors meeting in Germany. Source: EPA

The world's top economic powers dropped a pledge to oppose trade protectionism amid pushback from the Trump administration, which wants trade to more clearly benefit American companies and workers.

Finance ministers from the Group of 20 countries meeting in the southern German town of Baden-Baden issued a statement Saturday that said only that countries "are working to strengthen the contribution of trade" to their economies.

By comparison, last year's meeting called on them to resist "all forms" of protectionism, which can include border tariffs and rules that keep out imports to shield domestic companies from competition.

The statement from the G20 finance ministers and central bankers helps set the tone for further global economic co-operation.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, taking part in his first international meeting since being sworn in, sought to downplay the wording issue. He said that the statement needed to reflect the discussion at the current summit. "The historical language was not really relevant," he said.

"We believe in free trade: we are one of the largest markets in the world, we are one of the largest trading partners in the world," Mnuchin said.

"Having said that, we want to re-examine certain agreements... And to the extent that agreements are old agreements and need to be renegotiated we'll consider that as well."

He said trade deals need to offer a "win-win situation."

Mnuchin said the administration would be looking at relationships where the US was buying more than it could sell to its partner, and would be more aggressive in seeking enforcement of existing rules that would benefit US workers.

China and European countries had pushed for a stronger affirmation of cross-border trade without tariffs or barriers.

Canada took a middle approach in the talks, urging a statement supporting free trade but not taking a position on specific wording.

Host Germany dropped the no-protectionism pledge in the early drafting process ahead of the meeting, in apparent hopes of not antagonising the US and then finding a substitute that would also uphold free trade.

Trump and other critics of free trade argue that it can cause jobs, such as in the labour intensive manufacturing sector, to move to lower-cost countries.

Proponents say technological advances, such as automation that replaces workers with robots, are more to blame for the loss of jobs in such sectors.

Trump already pulled the US out of the Trans Pacific Partnership and has started the process to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada.


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Source: AAP



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