Donald Trump has done a lot since the election to assuage Corporate Americaâs fears of his presidency. Heâs named Wall Streeters, including just today Goldman Sachsâs Gary Cohn, and C-Suite bigwigs to his cabinet. And heâs softening his tone on immigration.
But not every executive in the Fortune 500 is convinced. And that group includes Fred Smith. The CEO of FedEx on Friday made a strongly worded critique of Trump and his trade policy. He said getting rid of the NAFTAâ"a trade agreement with Canada and Mexico that Trump has called âthe single worst trade deal ever approved in this countryââ"would be âcatastrophic for the U.S. economy.â And he argued that Trump should be very careful in managing the nationâs relationship with China.
Smith made his comments in a speech at the National Competitiveness Forum, an annual gathering of industrial CEOs and corporate executives.
Smith said NAFTA makes the U.S. $127 billion richer each year and is the basis for 14 million American jobs. Free trade is âabsolutely essential to American prosperity,â He added. On China, Smith also seemed to break with Trump, though not as much. The FedEx CEO allowed that China, and Asian economies in general, have not opened their markets to trade as much as the U.S. Whatâs more, they are much more inclined to engage in industrial policy like subsidizing business and currency manipulation that increases the U.S. trade deficit and potentially costs American jobs. At the same time, Smith argued that a Trump policy administrationâs top priority should be to âavoid a downward spiral in economic and commercial relations that would harm millions of people.â
There are two important takeaways from the speech. First, it shows that the corporate establishment is going to take a hardline on issues like NAFTA. Smith even made a vigorous defense of the much-maligned TPP agreement. And remember, Republican members of the House voted on 190 to 50 to give the President fast-track negotiating authority for that trade deal, which illustrates just how popular free trade deals remain in Trumpâs party. With Democrats bereft of power in Washington, and Trumpâs administration increasingly staffed by establishment figures, the President-elect could have a lonely fight on his hands if he attempts to dismantle the free-trade status quo.
But Smithâs comments on China does show that there is some wiggle room to find support for a tougher stance on trade relations with the worldâs second largest economy. For years now, Corporate America has downplayed Chinaâs and the rest of Asiaâs protectionist tendencies, as long their businesses continued to benefit from the Middle Kingdomâs economic rise.
But the American publicâs growing anger over what they see as raw trade deals can likely no longer be ignored by a Republican Party that is increasingly reliant on votes from the working class. Smithâs comments on China may be a signal of a growing consensus that the U.S. must insist on a change in trade relations with China. At the same time, thereâs no guarantee that this strategy will lead to better economic opportunities at home. Worse still, it could very well instigate Smithâs fear of an internecine âdownward spiralâ in trade relations.
Smith made his case, now itâs Trumpâs turn. The American public will be watching closely to see whether Trumpâs outside-the-box thinking can make the American labor market great again, or whether itâs just the sort of empty populism that the establishment has feared.
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