The Trump-induced G20 stress test on trade: did the German presidency pass?
Berger, Axel / Simon EvenettExternal Publications (2018)
in: Global Summitry 3 (2), 124-140
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/global/guy002
Information
At the beginning of its G20 year, the German Presidency attached little priority to trade policy. That stance had to change with the ascension to office of a U.S. President unwilling to follow the diplomatic niceties on trade policy of his predecessors. Moreover, following the U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in the first quarter of 2017, the fear grew that election-era protectionist slogans might be converted into action by the United States. This article assesses how effectively the German Presidency and the G20 process in general managed the Trump-induced “stress test” on trade policy. The non-binding form of international economic cooperation, evident with the Leaders’ Summit appears, in our opinion, to have been only partially successful.
Further IDOS experts
-
Brandi, Clara
Economy and Political Science
-
Goedeking, Nicholas
Comparative Political Economy
-
Haug, Sebastian
Political Science
-
Kachelmann, Matthias
Political Science
-
Kornher, Lukas
Economics
- Kötter, Elizabeth Chepkemboi
-
Li, Hangwei
Political Science
-
Novoselova, Anna
Political Science
-
Nowack, Daniel
Political Science
-
Olekseyuk, Zoryana
Economy
-
Stender, Frederik
Economics
-
Stewart, Benjamin
Social Science
-
Vogel, Tim
Economy
-
Volz, Ulrich
Economist
-
Wingens, Christopher
Political Science