IMF worries over ‘lack of trust’ among global trade partners

The Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde, has raised concern over what she described as ‘lack of trust’ among global trade partners stressing, “must be fixed.”
Lagarde raise the concern on Thursday at the World Bank’s and IMF’s Spring Meetings 2018 conference in Washington.
Tensions in global trade have spiked in recent months, with the U.S. imposing new metal tariffs on countries including allies. Donald Trump’s administration has since announced duties specifically on Chinese goods for breaking intellectual property rules in the U.S. Beijing prepared retaliatory measures, but said it is willing to talk trade with the United States. Trump has since threatened to impose further tariffs worth $100 billion on China.
When asked if imposing duties was a successful way to force partners to negotiate trade terms, Christine Lagarde, the IMF’s managing director, said, “I believe there is an issue of trust that needs to be preserved.
She added: “And when operators, investors, companies are uncertain about terms and conditions under which to organize the supply chain, terms and conditions under which they are going to trade, types of tariffs that they are going to have to pay, they step back and they don’t invest, they delay, they wait.”
Trump had said Wednesday that the U.S. and Japan would be discussing ways to boost their trade partnership. The president added that this is his favorite approach to trade bilaterally.
However, Lagarde told CNBC that in order to deal with trade imbalances “all countries have to be at the table.”
“We have seen protectionist measures on the rise for the last three years, there are issues about intellectual property, there are issues about subsidies to state-owned enterprises, and those have to be debated, they have to be discussed so that there is free trade,” she said.
Calling for a “determined” attitude to address trade issues, Lagarde said: “At the end of the day, enterprises, companies, corporates they operate on a cross-border basis, they know no boundaries. … We know from history that unilateral barriers, measures, tariffs decided unilaterally are not particularity effective.”