Macroscope | IMFโ€™s tariff warnings may be too little, too late



The IMF is delivering stark warnings about the damaging impact of tariffs and other US actions on the global economy and financial markets. But it may be too little too late to avoid a financial meltdown and global recession.

โ€œFinancial markets volatility is up. And trade policy uncertainty is literally off the charts,โ€ said Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, in Washington for the IMF/World Bank spring meetings. โ€œThis is a reminder that we live in a world of sudden and sweeping shifts. And it is a call to respond wisely.โ€

She noted the jump in US tariffs โ€œto levels last seen several lifetimes agoโ€ but refrained from outright censure of the Trump administration. Others are less reticent. โ€œThe Trump administration is embarking on an economic equivalent of the Vietnam war โ€“ a war of choice that will soon result in a quagmire, undermining faith at home and abroad in both the trustworthiness and the competence of the United States โ€“ and we all know how that turned out,โ€ wrote Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, in Foreign Affairs magazine.

We have come through many crises that we had been warned about. With the worldโ€™s biggest economy and source of finance at the heart of the problem, we must ask: who will bail out the system?

There is no obvious answer, given the overpowering size and might of US bond and stock markets. If anything can bring the Trump administration to heel and curb its rasher economic actions, it is the reaction of financial markets.

So far, these reactions have been โ€œmodestโ€, according to the IMFโ€™s April 14 global financial stability report. But financial markets have myriad linkages to the global real economy and it is through this nervous system that the body of the economy could suffer a collapse.

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