logo
As trade deals show, the US now seeks rent from Asean, not partnership

As trade deals show, the US now seeks rent from Asean, not partnership

US President Donald Trump's return to tariff diplomacy is on full display in Southeast Asia as he boasts of trade deals with first
Vietnam , then
Indonesia . The region faces some of the world's steepest US tariffs come August 1, and many countries have rushed into
last-minute talks to avoid economic fallout.
Advertisement
Trump has announced a
19 per cent tariff on all Indonesian goods entering the United States under a deal, down from 32 per cent, with Indonesia agreeing in return to buy
50 Boeing jets and spend US$19.5 billion on US energy and farm products – essentially prepaying for tariff relief. This mirrors Vietnam's deal of a 20 per cent tariff, down from 46 per cent, by essentially
agreeing to curb Chinese transshipments.
Since Trump launched his global tariff war in April, introducing a baseline 10 per cent and threatening additional tariffs unless countries negotiated US trade deals, few countries have signed up. Other than Vietnam and Indonesia, only
Britain has a deal. Others, such as the European Union, are readying
retaliatory measures even as they continue to negotiate a deal.
For Southeast Asia, these arrangements signal a shift in the US trade strategy – one that threatens to turn Asean members from competitive manufacturing hubs into 'fee for access' economies.
Washington isn't offering real integration or mutually beneficial trade. Instead, it's monetising market access, demanding higher tariffs and mandatory purchases. This transactional model may score short-term wins for US negotiators, but it undermines the competitiveness and sovereignty of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, tying the region into a rent-seeking system rather than a strategic partnership.
Advertisement
For starters, US tariffs on most Asean exports have risen dramatically, with access to the American market monetised under the guise of 'deals'. Even goods from Vietnam and Indonesia, which used to face most-favoured nation tariffs of 9.4 per cent and 8 per cent respectively on average, now attract more than double that.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How China's latest mega-dam threatens to undermine thaw in ties with India
How China's latest mega-dam threatens to undermine thaw in ties with India

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

How China's latest mega-dam threatens to undermine thaw in ties with India

Donald Trump's approach to international relations has placed China on the defensive, but by also alienating key US allies and partners, it may have created an unexpected opening for Beijing. Since the US president unveiled his tariff plans in April, Beijing has significantly ramped up efforts to improve ties with Europe, Southeast Asia, and even its most formidable regional rivals – Japan and India. In a sign of deepening detente between the Himalayan neighbours, India's external affairs minister S. Jaishankar visited Beijing last week for the first time since a deadly clash in the Galwan Valley in June 2020. During the visit, Jaishankar, a former ambassador to both China and the United States, met with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi and Vice-President Han Zheng, along with President Xi Jinping as part of a group meeting of foreign ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. The trip was widely seen as paving the way for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to attend the SCO summit in Tianjin at the end of August. According to state news agency Xinhua, Xi said he hoped to 'chart the course of the organisation together' with the nine other members of the SCO.

Japanese regulators find Visa pressured firms, hiked fees
Japanese regulators find Visa pressured firms, hiked fees

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Japanese regulators find Visa pressured firms, hiked fees

Japan 's antitrust watchdog said on Tuesday it had told Visa Worldwide to reform its business practices after concluding that the firm restricted and pressured card companies to use its credit information system. Advertisement It marks the first administrative action taken by the Japan Fair Trade Commission against a credit card company. The commission said the global credit card brand's Singaporean unit, which manages the Asia-Pacific region including Japan, had charged higher fees to other credit card firms that did not use its network to check credit information. The commission said the Visa unit has submitted plans to improve its practices, adding that it has accepted the plans. The company was exempted from facing fines or other punitive measures under the antimonopoly law. According to the Japan Consumer Credit Association, as of 2020, the Visa credit card brand accounted for about half of the market share in Japan. The total amount of credit card transactions in the country in 2024 stood at 116 trillion yen (US$785 billion). Credit card transactions involve an issuing company and management company, which both utilise a trusted reference system when a transaction is made, according to the watchdog. Advertisement Interchange fees, typically set by global brands, are paid by the management company to the issuing company during a transaction, while the issuing company pays a service charge to a different company – in this case Visa Worldwide – providing the reference system.

China's drone warfare exercise, warning over spy souvenirs: SCMP daily highlights
China's drone warfare exercise, warning over spy souvenirs: SCMP daily highlights

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

China's drone warfare exercise, warning over spy souvenirs: SCMP daily highlights

Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing China has staged a warfare demonstration using a full spectrum of uncrewed systems, underscoring its role as a leading global drone supplier, according to a state media report. GDP growth is on pace to meet leadership's goal for China, but a stubborn property slump, trade complications and deflationary pressure persist. Key rings, backpack charms, necklaces and earrings are among the items that might contain hidden spy functions, according to China's Ministry of State Security. Photo: Shutterstock China's top anti-spy agency has advised citizens travelling abroad to be cautious while accepting souvenirs that could have surveillance capabilities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store