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By Chris Bryant

AS US President Donald Trump鈥檚 sweeping trade levies take effect and raise his country鈥檚 average duties to the , it鈥檚 easy to imagine globalization is in reverse and that a new era of protectionism, fragmentation, and reshoring has begun. Some of the gloom may be overdone.

Although the US was the chief architect of the multilateral trading system and has become the world鈥檚 most lucrative consumer market, it can鈥檛 by itself turn back the clock on global economic interdependence. Prosperity gains from comparative advantage and low-cost container shipping are too great for the rest of the world to ignore. Even as the US embraces self-sufficiency and reveals itself to be an unreliable economic partner, others are keen to keep trading.

鈥淒espite all the talk of deglobalization, if you just look at the numbers, what we are seeing in the last two and a half years is an acceleration of globalization on the back of a huge commercial success from Chinese companies taking market share on the global stage,鈥 Vincent Clerc, the chief executive officer of A. P. Moller-Maersk A/S, told investors last week.

This was after the container shipping giant reported outside the US and forecast global container volumes could increase by as much as 4% this year. 鈥淭here is a new driver in container demand that is adding a lot of upside potential,鈥 Clerc said, predicting this stronger Chinese-led growth might last 鈥渁 few years.鈥 (The US this week extended a pause of nosebleed tariffs on Chinese goods for another 90 days.)

Although China鈥檚 exports to the US have since Trump first threatened a swathe of new duties in early April, it鈥檚 offset this by increasing exports to the rest of the world. Such robustness partly reflects stockpiling, and some economists in the second-half of the year as Washington intensifies scrutiny of the to the US via third countries.

Nevertheless, it鈥檚 also indicative of 鈥渁 dramatic change in China鈥檚 trade orientation, away from reliance on the US and toward a broader, more diversified global footprint,鈥 dated Aug. 8 by German asset manager DWS Group. 鈥淭he competitiveness of Chinese exports as well as intensifying economic links with regions like the Middle East and Africa is a structural trend that is likely to prevail.鈥

German logistics giant DHL Group is seeing similar shifts in demand, with time-definite US express shipments with a guaranteed delivery date in the second-quarter, while its deliveries to Asia rose 2% and those to the Middle East and Africa jumped 8%.

Global trade 鈥finds its way to keep flowing鈥 and even in the current environment there are 鈥渟till growth opportunities and growing trade lanes,鈥 Melanie Kreis, DHL鈥檚 chief financial officer, told analysts last week. Another DHL executive, Ken Lee, who heads the Asia-Pacific express business, recently called globalization

I don鈥檛 wish to play down the impact of the world鈥檚 largest economy undermining the rules-based trading system and raising import taxes, which will impose unnecessary costs on consumers, blunt competition, , delay investment, and cause global trade to than it otherwise would.

High tariffs on southeast Asian countries may undo some of the advantages of Chinese and western companies tapping new sources of cheap labor and , a strategy known as .

Furthermore, if China鈥檚 exports are diverted from the US to emerging markets, other countries may impose duties to protect domestic industries. (A reminder that China must do more to support demand by its own consumers.)

But with China accounting for more than 30% of global goods manufacturing and dominating in key decarbonization technologies, it鈥檚 hard to see the world swiftly turning its back on this highly efficient production. has continued to , which are cheap and of high quality, even as the US and Europe (to a lesser degree) raise trade barriers and .

One also shouldn鈥檛 forget that the majority of global trade doesn鈥檛 involve the US. Intra-Asia and Asia-Middle East trade corridors are 鈥渟ome of the fastest growing on the planet,鈥 HSBC Holdings Plc CEO Georges Elhedery said during a call with analysts last month.

鈥淕lobalization is very much alive and well. It鈥檚 just taking a very, very different complexion,鈥 Bill Winters, the boss of Standard Chartered Plc, told investors in late July, saying clients were diversifying supply chains, manufacturing, and distribution. The London-headquartered bank makes most of its money in Asia and the Middle East and has a large trade finance business.

Currently only around one-fifth of the value of all goods and services produced around the world end up in a different country, according to a in March, meaning global trade potential isn鈥檛 close to being exhausted.

鈥淪o far, global trade growth has been highly resilient, and we鈥檝e also not seen all that much retaliation from countries hit by US tariffs. That鈥檚 partly because those countries recognize how much they benefit from trade,鈥 Steven Altman, senior research scholar at the NYU Stern School of Business, told me. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see the US leading a global movement away from trade, and so far it appears globalization can survive Trump 2.0.鈥

Indeed, US protectionism and bullying are likely to convince trading partners to secure access to alternative markets and thereby draw them closer together. After being hit with some of the highest US tariff rates, Brazil and India last week reiterated plans to . After striking a long-sought trade deal with the in December, the European Union should now get on and ratify it.

So, yes, supply chains face upheaval while the US and China are pulling apart, but that doesn鈥檛 mean globalization is dead. Rather we may be entering a new era, characterized by US retrenchment, Chinese companies investing overseas 鈥 and other countries trading more with each other.

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