Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines have probably lost a modest 0.1%-0.2% of GDP from the disruption. For less open economies such as India and Indonesia the trade war has been “negligible”.
Trade disruption typically strengthens the dollar and weakens the Chinese renminbi as investors turn to the perceived safety of US assets. That leaves these economies caught in the middle, says Udith Sikand in Gavekal Research.
Weak currencies cause domestic inflation and make it more expensive to service foreign debts, but an even weaker yuan could also make their manufacturers less competitive against China. South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand look the most well prepared for this scenario.
Malaysia and India, where central banks have been running dovish monetary policies, look the most exposed to inflation. The dispute has already prompted a reorganisation of global trade networks, says Keegan Elmer in the South China Morning Post. Vietnam’s exports to the US were up 29% year-on-year in April and foreign investment has jumped.
A study last year by The Economist Intelligence Unit found Vietnam and Malaysia well-positioned to take over IT equipment manufacturing from China, while Bangladesh, India and Vietnam could grow their garment manufacturing industries.