US-China conflict may curb Malaysia's GDP growth


KUALA LUMPUR: The United States-China trade war could adversely impact Malaysia's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth by 1.3 per cent against what has been projected over the next two years.

CIMB Group Chief Economist Dr Donald Hanna said this scenario was possible if the tariff war continued to escalate and shake the confidence of financial markets, especially if China sold its US Treasuries.

“This would result in reductions in global trade that would affect Malaysia as an open economy and also result in spiralling interest rates that may exacerbate the problem,” he told reporters on the sidelines of the ASEAN Roundtable Series on “Trade War And Its Impact On ASEAN” organised by CIMB ASEAN Research Institute (CARI).

However, he noted that the 1.3 per cent was a possible downside and not the likely outcome.

The US has already imposed 25 per cent tariffs on US$34 billion worth of Chinese goods, and duties on an additional US$16 billion of imports will kick in on Aug 23.  The US government has also warned of 25 per cent tariffs on a further US$200 billion in Chinese imports.

Hanna also cited the possible impact of the trade war on growth among other ASEAN countries, including ASEAN6 (-1.4 per cent), Indonesia (-1.6 per cent ) Singapore (-2.0 per cent) and Thailand (-1.2 per cent).  

He warned that with the scale of retaliation, the worst might be yet to come, adding that higher tariffs would not only hurt the growth of China and the US, but would also curb global growth should it escalate into a full-blown trade war.

Hanna said ASEAN would suffer chiefly through financial effects, adding that trade diversions to the region were unlikely to outweigh the sheer trade losses from higher US tariffs.

China's exports, while having a high share of foreign value added, got a fairly small portion of that from ASEAN, he said.

According to Hanna, the biggest impact would be in the electronics sector in Malaysia and Singapore, food products in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand as well as wood products in Indonesia and Thailand.

“Due to the sheer magnitude of trade and the importance of finance in Singapore, it will experience the largest hits to its GDP from a trade war, especially one that implies higher US bond prices.

“Indonesia comes next (highest), hurt by higher value-added share in China's exports, by its trade deficit and by the 42 per cent of the domestic bond market held by foreigners,“ he added.

Meanwhile, CARI Chairman Tan Sri Munir Majid, in his opening remarks, said ASEAN member states usually responded to a trade war on the basis of individual national interest.

He noted it was also in national interest to collectively make ASEAN economic integration and beyond more real in order to position the region as a bedrock of future expansion and prosperity.

“Structural market intervention by the US has occurred before. The Plaza Accord, which forced the revaluation of the Japanese yen and the Deutsche mark, resulted in a dramatic increase in Japanese investment in Southeast Asia,” he said.

The US-China trade war might cause regional industrial restructuring but investment flows must not be blocked and free trade must stand, said Munir.

“This is the regional challenge for ASEAN members: to be part of an economic regional bloc to generate growth and to compensate for a more protected US$19 trillion American market,” he added. - Bernama

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Business News

Nasdaq, S&P set to open higher on tech boost, earnings glee
Sasbadi reports highest ever quarterly revenue
Aneka Jaringan leverages order book for growth
Chin Hin Group to develop two lands with combined GDV of RM1.08bil
CLMT 1Q net profit rises to RM33.49mil on higher occupancies, positive rental reversions
Ringgit ends marginally lower on firmer US dollar index
MoF: Govt to establish high-level facilitation platform to oversee potential, approved strategic investments
Meta Bright signs RM24mil leasing contract with Australia company
OCR Group to develop RM313mil residential project in Rawang
Legacy Credit emerges as substantial shareholder in VCI Global

Others Also Read