On April 4, in a decision that sent tremors through the world markets, US President Donald Trump announced a series of specific prices in the country. This included severe samples of the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asia Nations (ASEAN). Justified by commercial imbalances, the alleged unjust subsidies and national security problems, Washington’s decision signals a serious recalibration of global trade dynamics – and directly places Southeast Asia directly in the fire line.
As of April 9, prices, which vary from 10% (in the case of Singapore) to almost 50% (in the case of Cambodia), will apply to almost all exported products from the countries of the Anase to the United States, with a few exceptions. For the individual economies of the Anase, the implications may well be deep. Many have long depended on export growth, the United States playing a crucial role as a major market.
The assertion that developing countries benefited from the American economy neglect the fact that American consumers have collected the advantages of affordable and high quality goods for decades. These products are manufactured by the tireless work of workers in the world of world, including many Southeast Asians.
These new prices threaten to disrupt global supply chains, dissuade investments and slow down GDP growth, at a time when ASEAN nations need solid economic performance emergency to combat poverty, improve education and treat climate change.
At the regional level, fragmented trade flows are likely to weaken the collective influence of Anase in the world economy. While American measures weaken or separate interconnected supply chains, intra-aseen trade can falter, especially if Member States are starting to adopt rotating policies to protect their own national industries.
The status of anase as a unified economic block, which should become the fourth world economy by 2030, the risks decrease if the countries do not coordinate the responses to these external shocks.
Beyond economic parameters are the likely human balance sheet of Trump prices. Millions of working class citizens – especially in manufacturing centers such as Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam – are faced with dark prospects for lowering export demand, reduced factory production and job losses. Small and medium -sized enterprises (SMEs), which represent more than 90% of anase companies, are particularly vulnerable. Operating on narrow margins and often lack access to credit, many SMEs will find it difficult to absorb the impact of new prices or swivel in alternative markets.
Consumers, in particular, will feel pain. While the demand softens and the supply chains change, imported goods will become more expensive and rarer. The situation could worsen if the US dollar strengthens or interest rates remain high, which could cause inflation of essential products such as food, fuel and drugs. These inflationary pressures will disproportionately affect low-income households, deepening inequalities in a region that always recovered from the COVVI-19 pandemic and grazing with the increase in the cost of living. Without significant interventions by the governments of Southeast Asia, these economic shocks will know the dignity, security and means of subsistence of people, and could potentially result in social crises.
In addition, history shows us that economic instability often leads to political instability. In Southeast Asia, where democratic institutions in several countries remain fragile, there is a real risk that this economic shock can fuel populism, xenophobia or authoritarian consolidation.
Governments, desperate to maintain control or avoid disorders, can restrict freedoms, dissident silence or target vulnerable communities. Civil society, the independent media and the unions, already under pressure in certain parts of the region, could face larger restrictions. The narrowing of civic space and the erosion of democratic controls and counterweights should not be considered as collateral damage, but as a central concern in the way we sail in this crisis.
If the Anase does not respond to governance based on rights and democratic to its heart, the region can emerge from this more divided, more uneven and less free crisis.
Trump’s prices represent not only a commercial dispute, but a structural break in the international economic order which has been prevailing since the Second World War. This unprecedented crisis will also pose a crucial test of the unit and the resilience of the Anase. If the Anase responds to the blow – country by country, sector by sector – it will lose ground. But if he acts collectively, he can emerge stronger, tempered by the economic crisis.
To begin with, the region must deepen intra-asean economic integration by accelerating initiatives such as upgrading of the anase trade agreement in terms of goods, additional harmonization and the reduction of non-tariff obstacles to intra-aseen trade. Investment in regional infrastructure, digital trade and sustainable industries can create new growth engines, less dependent on volatile external markets. Above all, the Anase must also present a unified voice in global forums such as the WTO and the G-20, pleading for fair and open trade.
Above all, policies must be developed with people in the center. Social security nets, implementation programs and SME support mechanisms must be put on the scale to bring citizens from Southeast Asia to the impact of current world changes. A more connected and compassionate ASEAN – not only that contributes but also promotes confidence – will help determine whether the Anase can successfully resist the to come.
