Asean’s China+1 charm wears off as it bears brunt of Trump’s tariff wrath

Asean’s China+1 charm wears off as it bears brunt of Trump’s tariff wrath


[SINGAPORE] Export-reliant South-east Asia could lose its lustre as the darling of global supply-chain diversification with US President Donald Trump announcing harsher-than-expected tariffs on its trading partners.

Asean member states were blitzed by levies announced on Wednesday (Apr 2), ranging from the baseline 10 per cent tax on all American imports to additional reciprocal duties that bring the final tariff to as high as 49 per cent.

For comparison purposes, the European Union was slapped with a 20 per cent tax.

Ell added that unlike during Trump’s first presidency, the region is now directly in the firing line for aggressive and high levies.

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“Trump’s latest tariff policy has made it crystal clear that Asean is no longer a viable alternative to circumvent tariffs on China,” she told The Business Times.

As the trade war between the world’s two largest economies intensified, South-east Asian nations had risen as attractive options for Chinese companies seeking to bypass US restrictions, or firms adopting a China-plus-one strategy to diversify their supply chains.

That shine could soon fade.

Maybank’s regional co-head of macro research Chua Hak Bin demurred that the China-plus-one story is not dead, but agreed that it may be on pause.

The economist noted: “Multinational corporations will think twice about future foreign direct investment because of the overnight turn in the tariff handicap and excess global capacity that will be displaced from the new US tariff wall.”

Listing Vietnam as an example, he pointed out that firms which relocated there from China now face high reciprocal US duties of 46 per cent, which narrows the tariff divide with China significantly.

For China, the final tariffs amount to more than 65 per cent when taking into consideration the freshly announced tariffs of 34 per cent and an earlier 20 per cent levied since March, on top of existing average tariffs of some 10 to 15 per cent.

OCBC economists in a note issued on Thursday agreed that China’s prior strategy of routing exports through Asean may now be less effective.

“The trade dynamic may shift again, potentially driving China to pivot more of its exports directly to North America, despite the broader tariff environment,” said OCBC Global Markets Research.

First-order consequence: Growth hit

Economic growth is expected to take a beating, with research houses across the board downgrading their growth forecasts across most South-east Asian economies.

Bank J Safra Sarasin said in a flash report that the new tariffs are “big growth headwinds” for small Asian economies, the most affected among which include Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia.

OCBC economists in a report on Thursday lowered 2025 growth forecasts for Vietnam to 5 per cent from 6.2 per cent; Thailand to 2 per cent from 2.8 per cent; and Malaysia to 4.3 per cent from 4.5 per cent.

Maybank’s Chua cautioned that Asean will have to find new growth opportunities from the region and non-US markets.

Since the first Trump administration in 2017, member nations of the South-east Asian alliance have diversified their trading partners, intensified ties with other economic blocs and jacked up intra-regional transactions.

All of these put it in a much better position to shield itself from a full-blown fallout.

Stephen Olson, visiting senior fellow at the Iseas-Yusof Ishak Institute, said that regional trade pacts will take on greater importance as a “safe harbour” from US protectionism should tariffs be increased, which he noted the executive order explicitly provides for.

“The CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) could prove to be especially important, with additional countries likely to express interest in joining as the US heads in a protectionist direction,” he added.

But Moody’s Analytics Ell noted: “Bilateral trade agreements and finding alternative markets can only work at the margin as there are not sufficient alternatives to replace the US as a destination for final demand.”

Not cast in stone – yet

Nevertheless, pundits broadly agree that there is still room for mitigating factors, with the potential for upside.

Goldman Sachs analysts added in a research note that a portion of the reciprocal tariffs could be negotiated down should targeted countries offer reductions in their own tariff rates or commit to purchasing more American goods, among other efforts.

Ben May, director of global macro research at Oxford Economics, added that besides any concessions offered by governments to the US, the second main upside risk would be Trump rowing back “on his plans of his own accord, perhaps as a result of asset market sell-offs or a run of weaker data”.

This would not be a major surprise given that Trump has delayed the imposition of major hikes on Canada and Mexico and introduced exemptions, he added.

Olson concluded: “Some countries might succeed in getting their tariffs removed, while others could conceivably see their tariffs escalated even further.

“But it’s hard to imagine any scenario in which the region does not continue to play an important role in regional and global supply chains.”



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