WASHINGTON: The US would be better served by maintaining its open trade system rather than imposing new punitive duties on Chinese goods, the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday, adding that Washington and Beijing should work together to resolve their trade tensions.
IMF spokesperson Julie Kozack told a regular news briefing that such trade restrictions as those announced by President Joe Biden on Tuesday can distort trade and investment, fragment supply chains and trigger retaliatory actions.
“Fragmentation of this type can be very costly for the global economy,” she said.
Kozack said the IMF identified some 3,000 global trade restrictions in 2023, up from 1,000 in 2019, and under a worst-case scenario of severe fragmentation into geopolitical blocs, this could reduce global economic output by some 7%, equivalent to removing the GDP of Japan and Germany combined.
“With respect to the tariffs, our view is that the US would be better served by maintaining open trade policies that have been vital to its economic performance,” Kozack said. “We also encourage the US and China to work together toward a solution that addresses the underlying concerns that have exacerbated trade tensions between the two countries.”
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