US President-elect Donald Trump's stance on trade in a world where countries are putting up more barriers could be serious for New Zealand, says Reserve Bank governor Graeme Wheeler.
The RBNZ reviewed its decision to cut the official cash rate a quarter-point after Trump's unexpected win and the Republican Party's victory in the Senate and House of Representatives overnight, ultimately deciding to go ahead with the move. Wheeler told Parliament's finance and expenditure committee that long-term interest rate markets had a massive swing, initially falling 13 basis points before ending the day 20 basis points higher, as investors weighed up the prospect of looser regulation and corporate tax cuts with Trump's anti-trade rhetoric.
During his campaign, Trump has floated the introduction of high tariffs on Chinese and Mexican goods and renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement and Trans-Pacific Partnership at a time when global trade volumes were rising at their slowest rate since the early-1980s and G20 countries were adopting protectionist policies at their fastest pace since 2009, Wheeler said.
"That's what people need to focus on in the near-term - what is the US position on trade reform?" Wheeler said. "That potentially has significant implications for us. I think the US will need to think very seriously about its leadership in the Asia-Pacific region and what role trade and investment flows have in that because TPP was a vehicle for delivering a lot of that leadership."
In September, Prime Minister John Key noted the growing tide of protectionism around the world and said his biggest concern was that failure to ratify TPP could open the gates for even tighter regimes.