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    South Africa’s Play to Ease Tensions With Trump: A New Trade Deal

    Lawmakers were warned that the United States is planning more punitive actions against the country. Officials hope a new trade deal will help repair the icy relations.South Africa is preparing a new trade offer to present to President Trump, hoping to appeal to his transactional approach to foreign policy and ease boiling tensions with Washington, a spokesman for South Africa’s president said this week.The spokesman, Vincent Magwenya, said in an interview that South African officials are anticipating Mr. Trump will call for an end to the African Growth and Opportunity Act, a decades-old trade agreement that has been an economic boon to the 32 African nations that it includes.The act allows billions of dollars worth of goods — from produce to cars — from sub-Saharan Africa to enter the United States without duties. It is scheduled to expire this year but could be reauthorized by Congress.Although officials in South Africa hope the program will be renewed, they plan to offer the United States a bilateral deal that would increase trade in sectors such as energy, Mr. Magwenya said.A future without the African Growth and Opportunity Act would represent a significant shift for the continent’s largest economy. South Africa has for years lobbied against threats to expel it from the program on the grounds that its economy had grown too advanced. South African officials argue that the African Growth and Opportunity Act has kept businesses confident in the South African economy, helped maintain stability across the continent and fostered a healthy relationship with the United States.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

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    Private employers added just 77,000 jobs in February, far below expectations, ADP says

    Private companies added just 77,000 new workers for the month, well off the upwardly revised 186,000 in January and below the 148,000 estimate, ADP reported.
    The report reflected tariff concerns, as a sector that lumps together trade, transportation and utility jobs saw a loss of 33,000 positions.
    On the positive side, leisure and hospitality jobs jumped by 41,000, while professional and business services added 27,000 and financial activities and construction both saw gains of 25,000.

    A person exits a Home Depot store in Midtown Manhattan on February 26, 2025 in New York City. 
    Eduardo Munoz Alvarez | Corbis News | Getty Images

    Private sector job creation slowed to a crawl in February, fueling concerns of an economic slowdown, payrolls processing firm ADP reported Wednesday.
    Companies added just 77,000 new workers for the month, well off the upwardly revised 186,000 in January and below the 148,000 Dow Jones consensus estimate, according to seasonally adjusted figures from ADP.

    The total was the smallest increase since July and comes at a time when worries are rising that economic growth is slowing and worries brew that President Donald Trump’s tariff plans will spark another round of inflation. ADP said annual pay rose 4.7% in February, the same as the prior month.
    “Policy uncertainty and a slowdown in consumer spending might have led to layoffs or a slowdown in hiring last month,” said ADP chief economist Nela Richardson. “Our data, combined with other recent indicators, suggests a hiring hesitancy among employers as they assess the economic climate ahead.”
    Though most economic data points remain positive, sentiment indicators have shown rising fears among both business executives and consumers that the Trump tariffs could raise prices and slow growth. In the extreme scenario, the combination could cause stagflation, a condition of flat or negative growth and rising prices.
    The ADP report reflected some of those concerns, as a sector that lumps together trade, transportation and utility jobs saw a loss of 33,000 positions. Education and health services reported a decline of 28,000, while information services decreased by 14,000 at a time of uncertainty for artificial intelligence-related companies, despite Trump’s commitment to advancing AI efforts.
    On the positive side, leisure and hospitality jobs jumped by 41,000, while professional and business services added 27,000 and financial activities and construction both saw gains of 25,000. Manufacturing also reported an increase of 18,000, countering the ISM manufacturing survey for the month that indicated companies were pulling back on hiring.

    Services and goods-producing were in unusual balance for the month, adding 36,000 and 42,000 respectively on the month. As the U.S. is a services-based economy, that side usually dominates in job creation.
    Employment growth tilted towards large firms in February, with companies employing 500 or more workers reporting a gain of 37,000 while those with fewer than 50 employees saw a loss of 12,000.
    The ADP count serves as a precursor to the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics report on nonfarm payrolls, due Friday. However, the two reports can differ substantially due to different methodologies. In January, the BLS reported an increase of just 111,000 in private payrolls, well below the ADP count.
    Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect Friday’s report to show job gains of 170,000 and an unemployment rate steady at 4%. More

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    Germany’s fiscal U-turn could be a ‘game changer’ for the country’s sluggish economy, analysts say

    Germany’s prospective fiscal U-turn could prove transformational for the country’s struggling economy and European defense.
    Leaders of the likely incoming coalition government on Tuesday announced plans to reform the debt brake and create a special investment fund.
    Market reaction has widely been positive, with economists and analysts describing the move as ‘historic’ and a ‘game changer.’

    Markus Söder (l-r), Chairman of the CSU and Minister President of Bavaria, Friedrich Merz, candidate for Chancellor of the CDU/CSU, Chairman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group and Federal Chairman of the CDU, Lars Klingbeil, Chairman of the SPD parliamentary group and Federal Chairman of the SPD, and Saskia Esken, Party Chairwoman of the SPD, hold a press conference on the exploratory talks between the CDU/CSU and the SPD.
    Kay Nietfeld/dpa | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

    Germany’s prospective fiscal U-turn could prove transformational for the country’s struggling economy and for European defense — but Berlin lawmakers don’t have much time to make the historic shift happen.
    Fiscal and economic policies were seen as highly contentious during Germany’s previous ruling coalition and contributed to its eventual break-up at the end of last year. Amid ongoing negotiations for a new governing alliance, the Christian Democratic Union and its Christian Social Union affiliate — which led in the February polls — and the Social Democratic Party appear to have achieved something of a breakthrough.

    On Tuesday, likely-to-be chancellor Friedrich Merz and other political leaders announced plans to reform the long standing fiscal pillar known as Germany’s debt brake, specifically to allow for higher defense spending. They also revealed a new 500 billion euros ($535 billion) special fund for infrastructure.
    Materializing these plans will mean changes to the German constitution, which requires the support of a two-thirds majority in parliament. This would likely work at present — but would be very difficult to achieve once the newly elected parliament representatives come together for the first time later this month.
    A vote on the constitutional tweaks could therefore be pushed through within the week.

    ‘Big, bold, unexpected — a game changer’

    “Big, bold, unexpected – a game changer for the outlook,” Bank of America Global Research economists and analysts said in a Wednesday note, adding that the package “meaningfully” changed the outlook for Germany’s economy.
    For a couple of years now, Germany’s economy has been sluggishly teetering on the edge of a technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of gross domestic product declines. The national GDP has been alternating between expansion and contraction in each quarter throughout 2023 and 2024.

    The country is facing a wide range of issues, including infrastructure problems, a struggling housebuilding sector and pressure on some of the industries that have historically strongly contributed to its growth, such as autos.
    There is now hope for change. The planned special investment vehicle could benefit the country’s economy, experts believe.
    Markets can expect an economic boost and Germany’s growth estimates could likely be increased, Florian Schuster-Johnson, senior economist at Dezernat Zukunft, told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Wednesday.
    “I think in the short term this will just boost domestic demand obviously because there will be a lot of demand for people building these new infrastructures and companies that [are] getting new government orders now,” he said.
    Higher defense spending could also have a long-term effect on the economy, leading to increased production capacities that could eventually also come into civil use, Schuster-Johnson added.
    It could push Germany above the current NATO target of spending 2% of GDP on defense, Deutsche Bank Research economists said Tuesday.
    “Tonight’s robust rhetoric implies that the open-ended borrowing room for defence will be used at a pace that could bring German defence spending to at least 3% perhaps as early as next year,” they said.
    Merz suggested that geopolitical developments showed that major measures need to be taken to strengthen Germany’s and Europe’s security and defense capabilities.
    “In light of the threats to our freedom and peace on our continent, ‘whatever it takes’ now also needs to apply to our defense,” he added, according to a CNBC translation.
    While the policy announcements would largely be beneficial, other fiscal and budget plans from the likely new coalition are still to come and could have their own impact on Germany’s economy, ING’s global head of macro Carsten Brzeski noted.
    “We wouldn’t rule out that the official coalition talks will still bring some expenditure cuts, which would lower the positive impact of the announced fiscal stimulus,” he said.

    Policy details

    Going over the details, the 500 billion euro special investment fund will not be part of the federal budget, but it will be financed through credit without contributing to new debt. The funds are set to be used over 10 years, focusing on transport, energy, education, civil protection and other infrastructure. Federal states will also be allocated some of the funds to support their finances.
    To avoid the cash being subject to the debt brake, the fund will be rooted in the constitution and exempted from the fiscal rule.
    As it stands, the debt brake limits how much debt the government can take on, and dictates that the size of the federal government’s structural budget deficit must not exceed 0.35% of the country’s annual GDP.
    One key change under the new plan is that defense spending that goes beyond 1% of Germany’s GDP will not be counted towards the debt brake cap, meaning that such expenses will no longer be limited.
    Germany’s states will also be allowed to take on more debt than previously, and long-term proposals to modernize the debt brake and strengthen investments will also be undertaken.
    The proposed debt brake overhaul also mark a major shift from the CDU-CSU’s election campaign, during which the parties repeatedly positioned themselves as wanting to stick with the Angela Merkel-era rule. Merz eventually suggested he may be open to some reform.

    Market reaction

    The plans have sparked a widespread market reaction, with the German DAX jumping 3.4% by 12:51 p.m. London time, as German companies led the pan-European Stoxx 600 higher. Construction and manufacturing firms notched significant gains, as did German lenders.
    German borrowing costs soared. The yield on German 10-year bonds, which are seen as the euro zone benchmark, were last up by over 25 basis points, and the 2-year yield spiked by more than 16 basis points.
    Dezernat Zukunft’s Schuster-Johnson told CNBC the market reaction suggested surprise at the pace and magnitude of the proposed changes.
    “The bottom line is Germany is back and Germany is funded,” he said. “This move we’ve seen last night is really remarkable. you know Germans sometimes move late and sometimes delayed when big steps are needed however this is a big step and when they take it they do it so very radically.” More

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    European Central Bank to make ‘last easy rate cut’ as tariffs, higher fiscal spending loom

    Markets have priced in a quarter-point rate cut from the European Central Bank on Thursday and another half-point in cuts by the end of the year.
    However, with the hotly-debated “neutral level” in view and a host of economic and geopolitical uncertainties, disagreement among policymakers may increase from here.

    The European Central Bank is expected to cut interest rates for the second time this year at its Thursday meeting, but disagreement among policymakers may be set to increase amid tariff uncertainty and a potential ramp-up in regional defense spending.
    Markets had on Wednesday fully priced in a quarter-point rate cut for the March meeting, taking the ECB’s key rate to 2.5% — down from its peak of 4% in the middle of last year. A further reduction to 2% by the end of the year was also priced in.

    A relatively swift pace of monetary easing has been expected over the last nine months, with euro zone headline inflation coming in consistently below 3%, and economic growth remaining weak. The ECB’s Governing Council has almost always made its decisions unanimously and provided relatively firm guidance of its next steps to guide market expectations.
    However, the central bank now appears within touching distance of the hotly-debated “neutral rate” at which policy is neither stimulating nor restricting the economy, when rates would be expected to be kept on hold. Policymakers disagree on exactly where this level is, and whether rates might need to be brought even lower than that level in response to factors such as low growth.
    ECB President Christine Lagarde told CNBC in January she believed the range was between 1.75% and 2.25%, down from her previous estimate of between 1.75% and 2.5% — but the ECB itself has not issued a firmer indication since.
    Bank of America Global Research analysts said in a Wednesday note that following this week’s meeting they expected increased internal dispute between policymakers.
    “This is the last ‘easy’ rate cut in our views, as disagreements grow,” they said. However, they reiterated a view ahead of market expectations for the ECB to slash rates to 1.5% by September.

    “The debate among ECB policymakers has picked up over recent weeks,” noted Goldman Sachs analysts, who said they expected the voting Governing Council to focus on whether broad financial conditions, bank lending conditions, business reports and lending indicate rates are still restrictive.

    Spending hike

    The outlook is meanwhile clouded by a host of factors causing a stir in markets and the economy. The ECB staff macroeconomic projections on inflation and growth that will be released Thursday will therefore be closely-watched, but may be taken with a pinch of salt.
    The U.S. has launched tariffs on its biggest trading partners which are expected to cause a slowdown in global sectors including automotives — but the duties might yet be pared back. U.S. President Donald Trump has said the European Union will be next in-line for high duties — however, the prospect of a negotiation also remains in play. The impact of such tariffs would also be uncertain, with a slowdown in trade dragging on economic activity, but also potentially weighing on the euro, raising the cost of imports.
    European governments are meanwhile gearing up to hike spending on defense as relations with the U.S. over the Ukraine war fracture.
    Lagarde is likely to be questioned on the potential impact of the deal announced this week in Germany between the country’s expected next coalition partners. An agreement on reforming German debt rules has not yet been finalized, but is expected to unlock up to a trillion euros in spending on defense and infrastructure, with the euro sharply rallying on the news Wednesday.

    Analysts at Rabobank said euro gains were “in part due to expectations that room for further ECB rates cuts will be more confined,” with the reforms and higher spending bringing the “promise of an uplift in economic growth.”
    A broader move toward European rearmament would represent “a debt-financed fiscal expansion that would spur economic activity, allow some reflation, and cause the ECB to reconsider the extent of its policy rate cuts going forward,” Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie, said Tuesday.

    Still restrictive?

    Despite all of this uncertainty, some analysts do not expect the ECB to significantly update its guidance on Thursday, which in January stressed that inflation was expected to converge toward target, monetary policy remains restrictive, and that the central bank will continue its data-dependent approach.
    A particular focus will be on whether it alters the message that policy is “restrictive,” and whether there is a suggestion that a rate hold may be coming at the next meeting in April.
    “Given the unusual uncertainty created by the ongoing political and geopolitical developments, we expect the Governing Council of the ECB to be driven this week by a desire to maximise optionality about subsequent moves,” Citi analysts said Wednesday.
    “We think this may translate into a more cautious communication, no longer asserting that monetary policy is restrictive. We would not read this as a sign that a pause in the easing process is forthcoming, however. Shifting geopolitics may eventually generate reflationary fiscal policies, but in the near term, they will likely increase the argument for monetary easing.” More

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    FirstFT: Trump declares ‘we are just getting started’ in longest address to Congress in modern times

    This article is an on-site version of our FirstFT newsletter. Subscribers can sign up to our Asia, Europe/Africa or Americas edition to get the newsletter delivered every weekday morning. Explore all of our newsletters hereGood morning and welcome back. We start with the longest State of the Union address of modern times and here are the other stories we are covering this morning:China’s new growth targetGermany’s historic commitment to increase defence spendingAn alternative plan for Gaza And why Ghanaian farmers are ditching cocoa for goldDonald Trump admitted tariffs would cause “a little disturbance” for the US economy as he boasted about the achievements of his administration after its first six weeks in office in the longest annual address to the joint houses of Congress of modern times.The US president promised to balance the federal budget while insisting he would press ahead with tax cuts and thanked Elon Musk for slashing government costs in a deeply partisan 99-minute speech that took a swipe at his predecessor Joe Biden for his “horrible” Chips Act and the soaring price of eggs. But he was more conciliatory when it came to Ukraine, thanking President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for an “important letter” indicating that he was ready to negotiate a peace deal with Russia and sign a pact giving the US access to critical Ukrainian minerals. We are “just getting started” Trump declared as he touted a list of domestic and international achievements. “We have accomplished more in 43 days than most administrations accomplish in four years or eight years,” he said.His speech was met with heckles from some Democrats, including Al Green from Texas who was removed. Others held up signs displaying messages like “that’s a lie” and “false” while Republicans cheered continuously in the divided chamber. Here’s more coverage of the address.Highlights: The key moments of the marathon address to Congress.Instant Insight: The speech was neither libertarian nor traditionally conservative, or even conventionally nationalist, writes Edward Luce. It was pure Trumpian personalism.Here’s what else we’re keeping tabs on today:Economic data: The monthly employment report from ADP, the payroll company, will be closely watched ahead of Friday’s data from the government. The Institute for Supply Management releases its non-manufacturing PMI index for February.Results: Campbell’s releases second-quarter revenues while Abercrombie & Fitch is expected to report fourth-quarter results. Jack Daniel’s parent, Brown-Forman, reports on its third-quarter performance.Five more top stories1. German borrowing costs have surged today after chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz agreed a historic deal with his probable coalition partners that would relax the country’s strict “debt brake” to fund investment in the military and infrastructure. The yield on the 10-year Bund rose 0.18 percentage points to 2.66 per cent, its biggest one-day move since 2020. Read more on Merz’s historic announcement. 2. China has announced an ambitious 2025 growth target of “around 5 per cent” despite a slowdown in the domestic economy and trade tensions with the US. Delivering the new target, Premier Li Qiang also said borrowing would have to rise to stimulate the economy and inflation would fall. Here’s more on Qiang’s address to the National People’s Congress.3. Arab leaders have adopted a plan for the postwar administration and reconstruction of Gaza in a bid to provide an alternative to Trump’s proposal for the war-shattered enclave to be emptied of Palestinians and taken over by the US. Egypt has been leading efforts to devise an alternative that ensures Hamas is no longer in power in Gaza. This is what we know about the plan so far. 4. BlackRock has agreed to buy two major ports on the Panama Canal from their Hong Kong-based owner as part of a $22.8bn deal, following pressure from Donald Trump over alleged Chinese influence at the vital waterway. The deal, announced yesterday, also includes an 80 per cent stake of CK Hutchison’s ports subsidiaries, which run 43 ports in 23 countries. Here’s how the agreement will work. 5. Deloitte has told staff in its US tax practice that it will now consider office attendance figures as part of their performance reviews, according to an email seen by the Financial Times. Performance reviews are used by the Big Four firm to help determine bonuses. Read more of the email which was sent by Katie Zinn, the tax practice’s chief talent officer.The Big Read© FT montage/Getty/BloombergTwo of the biggest names in global macro trad­ing, Alan Howard and Chris Rokos, embody different approaches to a perennial issue of hedge funds with a talented individual at their centre: how to create a sustainable business without their star trader founders.We’re also reading . . . Chart of the dayGhana’s cocoa farmers are abandoning beans for bullion in an illegal gold mining boom known as “galamsey”. Ghana is the world’s second-largest cocoa producer and a shortage of the commodity has helped drive global chocolate prices to historic highs. Aanu Adeoye reports from Ghana’s eastern region of Atiwa West on the plight of farmers forced to give up their land. Take a break from the news . . . A company aiming to revive extinct animal species has unveiled genetically engineered “woolly mice” that it says are an important milestone in its quest to bring back mammoths. Three of the shaggy rodents genetically engineered by US-based Colossal Biosciences More

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    What economists get wrong about tariff wars

    Nat Dyer is an author.In December 1703, following a stunning English and Dutch naval victory over the French fleet, a well-connected and cunning English diplomat, John Methuen, convinced the King of Portugal to sign a trade deal. It eliminated tariffs for English woollen cloth entering Portugal and gave Portuguese wine preferential treatment in England. In the decades that followed, trade boomed between the two countries in both commodities.This exchange of English cloth and Portuguese wine would become the stuff of legend.The cloth and wine example was used by the stockbroker-turned-economist David Ricardo in 1817 to explain why freer international trade benefited all countries, as long as they specialise in what they make most efficiently. Ricardo’s principle of comparative advantage has been praised by generations of Nobel winning economists as one of the profession’s greatest insights. Paul Samuelson called it a “beautiful” and the “unshakeable” basis for international trade. Paul Krugman, while shaping the pro-globalisation consensus in the 1990s, wrote that Ricardo’s idea was: “utterly true, immensely sophisticated — and extremely relevant to the modern world.”Ricardo has come in useful again and again. When, White House economist Greg Mankiw got in political hot water in 2004 for saying that offshoring American jobs was “probably a plus for the economy in the long run” he lent on the 200-year-old theory. As The New Yorker explained, economists still rely on Ricardo’s “extremely powerful” insight: the story of “England exchanging its surplus cloth for Portugal’s surplus wine, to the benefit of consumers in both places.” If only the public and politicians could grasp the counter-intuitive logic of Ricardo’s “difficult” idea, Krugman had suggested, then opposition to free trade would disappear. The problem, Mankiw wrote, was that the public were “worse than ignorant” about good trade policy. Now, with Trump’s will-he-won’t-he trade wars and tariff brinkmanship, similar voices have been heard again. What we need in the age of Trump, economist Justin Wolfers, wrote recently — betraying a quasi-religious devotion — is “a sermon about Ricardian comparative advantage and gains from trade.”Yet, curiously, too few economic theorists have interrogated the actual, messy history of trade. Gold, cloth and chainsAll major economic powers — Britain, Germany, and yes the USA, and China — rose to their position while protecting their industries with high tariffs. Even a quick look at economists’ favourite example of win-win trade between England and Portugal reveals a radically different picture.As I describe in my book Ricardo’s Dream, the classic English and Portuguese exchange was about politics and power, not just economics. The naval victory, at the Battle of Vigo Bay in 1702, was so important because the ailing Portuguese Empire was caught in a geopolitical bind between the rising northern powers of England and France. John Methuen signed two military treaties with the Portuguese before he sealed the commercial deal. With the Cloth and Wine Treaty, Portugal bought not just products but protection. The deal helped ruin Portugal’s own textile manufacturing, as Methuen predicted, and even its increased port exports left a huge trade deficit with England decade after decade. The trade between the two countries was balanced with a commodity almost never mentioned by trade theorists: gold from Brazil.The Portuguese had struck gold in its South American colony in the 1690s. The Brazilian Gold Rush lasted most of the 18th century and doubled world production. More than half of this gold ended up in London (enriching, among others, Sir Isaac Newton). The gold flows were no secret. Even Adam Smith, Ricardo’s fellow classical economist, wrote: “Almost all of our gold, it is said, comes from Portugal” or more accurately from “the Brazils”. And, yet, the connections are rarely made. One more product, excluded from the conventional story, comes into view when we look at how the gold was mined. It is a product no longer legally traded: human beings. Brazil’s gold rush relied on huge numbers of enslaved Africans, transported in chains across the Atlantic. Brazilian gold supercharged the transatlantic slave trade and, as contemporaries observed, turned the West African Gold Coast into a “slave coast”. That’s not all. Much of the English cloth — in some years around 85 per cent — that landed in Portuguese ports was re-exported to Africa to be exchanged for captive men, women, and children. In the global historical view, the trade in English cloth and Portugal wine appears to be an appendix, and facilitator, of the transatlantic triangular trade.But, Ricardo’s famous model excluded questions of power, empire, and exploitation from the beginning. As Matthew Watson, professor of political economy at Warwick University, has written, Ricardo’s theory is “a mathematical facade behind which the actual historical social relations of production of the real England and Portugal are deliberately taken out of the equation”. These are “explicitly oppressive social relations of production based on slave labour and the imperial policing of national hierarchies”. Those who hold on to the old story of English cloth and Portuguese wine have the wool pulled over their eyes. Of course, other episodes of international trade paint a much rosier picture: of how trade has expanded peoples’ worlds, their access to products, and the flow of news and culture. Yet, the English and Portuguese history does fit into a pattern of so-called unequal treaties that Britain imposed on nominally independent states — such as Siam (Thailand), China and Persia — in the 19th century. The political economist Ha-Joon Chang has written that this first period of economic globalisation was “‘made possible, in large part, by military might, rather than market forces”.The backlashIn the 1980s, fears of the rise of a new protectionism pushed policymakers to create a vast web of bilateral, regional, and global trade agreements. Political parties whether on the right or left embraced a very specific type of globalisation, which was sometimes seen as a universal law akin to gravity. “Free trade” became a dogma that was used, in part, to tilt the global trading system in favour of large multinational corporations and Wall Street, giving them new rights and powers and plumping their profits. CEO pay skyrocketed while regular, working people often lost out, for example, the millions of Americans who lost their livelihoods with the China Shock — after China joined the WTO in 2001 and flooded the US with cheap products. All the while, economists touted the benefits of trade as long as their models showed that the winners could theoretically compensate the losers, regardless of whether it happened or not. Another aspect excluded from economists’ models was global power competition, making them increasingly less relevant to a political class fixated on a resurgent China. Fuelled in part by the backlash to globalisation, Donald Trump won the White House and is now back for a second time. He has made good on his promise to turn away from free trade surrounding himself with advisors such as, Peter Navarro, who has argued that: “Ricardo is dead!” Navarro, of course, is not worried about how the West exploited the wealth of its formal and informal colonies but how in the 21st century the USA has, in his eyes, been unfairly taken advantage of by China’s state capitalism. America’s turn to tariffs is a recognition of its fragility, not strength. Progressives will disagree with many of his solutions, but Navarro is surely right that “the economics profession must do a much better job than David Ricardo of modelling trade in the real world.” Now, Trump is speaking loudly and hitting allies and enemies alike with a big stick labelled ‘tariffs’. He has mobilised a real, justified complaint against hyperglobalisation to promote a highly divisive and potentially damaging policy. Along the way, he has made the power and politics of trade policy, so often concealed or denied, plain for all to see. The constitutional wrecking ball of Trump’s first few weeks of his second term have rightly outraged many. But on the issue of tariffs, a desire to return to the ”old Ricardian verities” and argue that they are always and everywhere bad is a road to nowhere. Trying to counter Trump with ‘fairy tale’ economic theories that helped fuel his rise is like trying to put out a house fire with matches. Opposition to Trump’s harmful and damaging policies requires a more solid footing. We need a new, genuinely progressive economics with its eyes focused on the real world and its history, rather than abstract models built on unreality. This has begun to emerge in the past decade. There is a growing acceptance that whether tariffs are good or bad depends on context, that there is a difference between targeted and across-the-board tariffs, and that new forms of protectionism could reduce inequality or ecological destruction. Much turns on whether economics can continue to evolve into a field of study that is, to borrow a line, genuinely true, sophisticated, and relevant to the modern [email protected] More

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    It’s a growth scare first and a tariff scare second

    This article is an on-site version of our Unhedged newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newslettersGood morning. Yesterday was a wild ride in the stock and bond markets, with shares forming a reverse N shape (down, up, down again) through the day and Treasury yields forming a reverse hockey stick (flat, then sharply up). Remember your Mandelbrot: over any given timeframe, markets have momentum and follow a trend, but in the transition periods between trends, they bounce around quite randomly. This feels like one of those indeterminate transition periods. So when does the bouncing end, and the next trend take hold? Email us: [email protected] and [email protected] is a growth scare first and a tariff scare secondMarkets are volatile and uneasy, and it is easy to attribute this to the US tariffs just imposed on Canada, Mexico, and China. But what we are seeing in markets is more consistent with a general growth scare than a tariff-specific sell-off. And this makes sense: the tariffs were an unpleasant surprise that followed and added to, rather than caused, a bundle of bad signals from the economy and markets.That was certainly true of Monday’s equity sell-off which, as we detailed yesterday, looked like a classic risk-off day, with defensives rising and cyclicals falling. And it was certainly true during Tuesday’s rollercoaster. The biggest losers on the day were US banks, with the BKW bank index falling 4.5 per cent. Why banks? Because most US banks’ lending businesses are leveraged to domestic growth, and their margins will be diminished by the lower interest rates that slower growth will bring in its train. And the market does see rates coming down: the futures market has added almost two full rate cuts to its expectations for 2025 in the past month.More evidence that growth rather that tariffs is primarily in play: the dollar has been falling for more than a month, and fell sharply yesterday.If there is one reliable consensus about tariffs among their fans and foes, it is that they are dollar-positive (tariffs reduce demand for imports and therefore the foreign currencies needed to buy those goods). So what is driving the greenback down now? Again, lower growth expectations; they drive down interest rates (in particular real rates), lowering the differential with rates in Europe and elsewhere. The currencies adjust accordingly. Signs of expansionary fiscal policy in Germany reinforce this effect; the fact that a few weeks ago every trader and his dog were long the dollar does, too. One might wonder, in addition, whether financial flows are weakening the dollar as well, as US risk assets no longer look like a one-way bet. The fund flows data over the next few weeks will be interesting in this respect.The growth and tariff effects are not mutually exclusive. Tariffs, in the short term, are growth negative. But right now there is much more going on than that.Investor sentiment, the wall of worry, and valuationsThe standard measure of retail investor sentiment, the AAII Survey, has undergone a remarkable crash over the past month. The latest reading of its bull-bear spread (the percentage of respondents feeling bullish about markets over the next six months, minus the percentage feeling bearish), from the last week in February, hit -41, a low only equalled twice in the past 20 years. See the light blue line here:Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.On the standard reading, this is a bullish sign — “be greedy when others are scared” as they say, or “stocks climb a wall of worry”. Indeed, for a long-term investor, the previous deep lows in the survey, in 2009 and 2022, were excellent times to buy stocks.That might be the case this time, too. But there is something to keep in mind. Stocks are currently only 10 per cent off their all-time highs last month. But at the previous lows in sentiment, equity prices had already fallen much harder. Stocks, in other words, look like they might have a ways to go before catching up (down?) with sentiment, should sentiment stay so depressed.Another way to make the same point is with valuations. At the previous lows in the bull-bear spread, price/earnings valuations had hit lows (see the dark blue line above). And while valuations have dropped recently, they are still very high by historical standards.Doge, growth and the labour marketIt is hard to analyse the economic impact of the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), Elon Musk’s effort to shrink the federal government. Like all things with him and Trump, it’s messy. Its accomplishments have been overstated, and nearly all of its actions are under legal review and could be reversed.Doge could, in theory, severely slash government spending, with a negative flow through to GDP. But there are many who would argue that less government spending would be offset by a surge in investment and a private sector unburdened by oversight. At the same time, Congress would probably oppose any significant cuts to spending.The larger and more pressing risks are to the labour market. The government employs 3mn civilian workers, and even more government contractors (estimates vary, but a decent rule of thumb is 2:1, according to Torsten Slok at Apollo). The federal government started to grow at a faster rate in 2023:Over the past 18 months, the government has added roughly 3,000 federal employees each month — a big step up by its own standards, but a small change compared to the average of 186,000 jobs added per month last year. According to Skanda Amarnath at Employ America, the federal government has never been a major driver of employment growth, but it has been a drag:During past examples [of government downsizing], like the budget sequestration in the early 2010s, the federal government was a drag on hiring, about -4,000 to -10,000 a month. We might see a net reduction of something like 13,000 off of payroll growth, in the worst-case scenario.Last month, the US economy added 143,000 jobs — far below what many predict is our current break-even. A steady-to-fast reduction in government employees at a similar scale to the early 2010s would weaken an already softening labour market. And Doge-led reductions in federal employees is likely to go hand-in-hand with cuts in other sectors that receive federal money: state and local governments, non-profits and higher education, and professional services (where contractors generally sit).A flood of government lay-offs would not necessarily trigger a recession, however. In general, an uptick in the three-month moving average of national unemployment of 0.5 per cent precedes a recession, or so says the Sahm rule, an indicator widely used by policymakers. Doge would have to increase the unemployed population by more than 1mn to trigger the rule, according toClaudia Sahm at New Century Advisors, who came up with it. Most of the estimates Unhedged has seen suggest that Doge could lay off a maximum of 800,000 to 1mn federal employees and contractors. But even if there is not a recession, Doge’s job cuts could cause pain in communities where the government is one of, if not the, main employer: areas around army bases and the DC-suburbs, for example. And a weakening job market could put the Federal Reserve in a tough spot. Inflation is not dead, and the economy is weakening. If today’s new tariffs and whatever retaliation they invite causes prices to go up, the Fed needs to feel good about the job market to keep rates where they are or raise them further. If Doge makes the employment picture look significantly worse, the central bank could be caught between its two mandates, and the market might realise its worst fear: stagflation.(Reiter)One Good ReadRoyal shade.FT Unhedged podcastCan’t get enough of Unhedged? Listen to our new podcast, for a 15-minute dive into the latest markets news and financial headlines, twice a week. 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    Trump warns tariffs will cause ‘a little disturbance’ in defiant speech

    Show video infoDonald Trump has warned that tariffs on the US’s biggest trading partners will cause “a little disturbance”, as he vowed to push ahead with his sharply divisive domestic agenda in a combative speech to Congress.In the first major policy speech of his second term, the president doubled down on his decision to impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canada and Mexico, and an additional 10 per cent levy on China.“Tariffs are about making America rich again, and making America great again,” he said. “It’s happening, and it will happen rather quickly.” Trump’s address comes amid mounting evidence that businesses and consumers are concerned about the effect of tariffs, which are likely to disrupt supply chains and send the costs of some goods higher.Wall Street stocks have wiped out all of their post-election gains as hopes that Trump’s policies would drive stronger growth have turned to worries about the trajectory for the world’s biggest economy. “There will be a little disturbance, but we’re OK with that,” Trump said. Trump also insisted that so-called reciprocal tariffs on goods from a wide range of countries would be imposed on April 2.The more than 90-minute speech, delivered to a palpably divided chamber in which several Democrats held signs of protest, caps a dramatic six weeks in which Trump has unleashed an aggressive agenda to reshape US trade and foreign policy and impose sweeping changes across the government.To raucous applause from Republicans, Trump declared: “America’s momentum is back. Our spirit is back. Our pride is back, our confidence is back. And the American dream is surging, bigger and better than ever before.”Trump used the speech to underscore his muscular approach to foreign policy, insisting he would “get” Greenland, the Arctic island that is part of Denmark and which he has repeatedly said he wants to take over, “one way or another”.New Mexico’s Democratic representative Melanie Stansbury holds a sign reading ‘This is not normal’ as Trump arrives to address Congress More