International trade and the G7 [What Think Tanks are thinking]
The escalating trade conflict between the United States and other countries and regions, such as China and the European Union, coupled with a capricious outcome of the recent summit of the world’s seven most industrialised economies (G7) have raised a question mark over the US’s continued commitment to the stability of the post-Cold War, rules-based international economic and political order. The row, which is already affecting stock and bond markets, started when US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on steel and aluminium imports this year, under his ‘America First’ policy. Now that China and the EU have applied retaliatory tariffs, President Trump threatens to erect more trade barriers, for example against EU-made cars. This note offers links to a series of recent commentaries and reports from major international think tanks and research institutes on the trade conflict, the outcome of the G7 meeting and the future of the international economic order. More reports on international trade can be found in a previous edition of 'What Think Tanks are thinking' published in March 2018.
Briefing
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Publication type
Author
Policy area
Keyword
- America
- economic geography
- economic policy
- ECONOMICS
- Europe
- European construction
- European Union
- EUROPEAN UNION
- GEOGRAPHY
- international affairs
- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- international trade
- international trade
- political geography
- PRODUCTION, TECHNOLOGY AND RESEARCH
- protectionism
- research and intellectual property
- Russia
- summit meeting
- tariff policy
- tariff policy
- technology and technical regulations
- technology transfer
- think tank
- TRADE
- transatlantic relations
- United States