Terwijl alle ogen gericht zijn op de kapitaalposities van banken en overheden, missen we een belangrijk gevaar voor de wereldeconomie: verstoorde handelsbalansen tussen landen. Die zullen een toenemend protectionisme uitlokken, met mogelijk desastreuze gevolgen, betoogt Simon Tilford, chief economist at the Centre for European Reform.
The developed world’s slide into recession threatens an outbreak of protectionism. Unlike in 2008, governments now have few tools with which to combat a renewed economic downturn, which raises the likelihood of it developing into a slump. If so, protectionist pressure is certain to build. The country that moves first to erect trade barriers will no doubt take the blame for the resulting damage to the trading system. But the real villains will be the countries that skew their exchange policies, tax systems and industrial structures to gain export advantage. The irony is that the countries that are most dependent on free trade – those that produce more than they consume – are the biggest obstacle to a sustained recovery in the global economy. They need to change course before it is too late: all will suffer if countries move to erect new trade barriers, but the surplus economies will suffer most.