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    Trump’s Asian Tour: The Art of the Deal Returns

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    • 2025.06.11
    • Economics
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    Europe – 2025-2026 Scenario: headwinds are easing, but new ones are emerging

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    • 2025.04.11
    • Economics
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    Morocco’s politicised youth are forcing the country to reckon with its contradictions

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    • 2025.23.10
    • Economics
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    Donald Trump and his bankers

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    • 2025.16.10
    • Economics
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    World – Macro-economic scenario 2025-2026 – Hoping for a hint of stability...

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    • 2025.03.10
    • Economics
    • Industry and Services
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    China: behind involution lie deep-seated economic imbalances

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    • 2025.02.10
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    Trump is right about the diagnosis but wrong about the remedies

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    • 2025.25.09
    • Economics
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  • Trump’s Asian Tour: The Art of the Deal Returns

    Donald Trump recently undertook a grand tour of Asia for the first time since his inauguration. His first stop was Malaysia, where he attended the ASEAN Summit and finalised trade deals negotiated over the summer as well as agreements concerning rare earths.

    Mixing genres in the way only he can, Trump also orchestrated the signing of a “peace deal” between Cambodia and Thailand. Tensions between the two countries had flared again in July against a backdrop of political discord and border conflict, with clashes on the ground leaving at least 43 dead and displacing more than 300,000 people. Moreover, all three countries involved (Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia, which had been acting as a mediator) had seen sudden progress in their trade talks with the United States thanks to the conflict: following an initial ceasefire concluded under US sponsorship, “reciprocal tariffs” on imports into the US from those countries had fallen to 19%. 

    Helping Trump reaffirm his stance as “President of Peace”, Cambodia event went as far as confirming its support for the US President to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

    The necessity of the deal

    For these South Asian countries, which have built their growth models on participation in foreign trade, striking a deal with the US – one of their main customers – was vital. That’s undoubtedly why they agreed to events being staged as they were, and to terms that are not particularly favourable to them, to maintain access to the US market. 

    Although ASEAN1 is, in theory, a platform that serves to coordinate its members’ positions in the context of trade talks, the last few months have shown that, when dealing with the US, the alliance’s member countries have acted individually and, on the face of it, without consulting each other. As soon as any one member reached a deal, it was therefore vital that the others do likewise and ensure that overall tariff conditions were equivalent. The ASEAN nations all participate in broadly similar value chains and compete with one another in some markets (notably textiles and electronics). 

    On 2 April, Asia found itself bearing the brunt of the wave of tariffs announced by the US administration. This was not surprising: the “formula”2 used was designed to penalise those countries that showed large surpluses (in goods) with the US. And seven of the US’s ten largest bilateral trade deficits are with Asian countries. 

    Among these countries are: some of the US’s foremost partners and allies (South Korea, Japan, Taiwan), though that does not mean they have been spared tariffs; China, of course; and the ASEAN countries, whose exports to the US have risen rapidly since 2018 as companies have adopting a strategy of diversification to escape the first round of US import tariffs on Chinese goods. 

    As well as being a top-tier trading partner, the US is also the number one foreign investor in the ASEAN countries (with $74.7 billion in foreign direct investment in 2023, the most recent year for which data is available), far ahead of China ($17.5 billion). More than 6,000 US companies have a presence in the region, supporting over 600,000 direct jobs. 

    The countries of South Asia – particularly Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia – have thus become transshipment and re-export hubs for Chinese products, though they have also succeeded in capturing a portion of certain value chains. This phenomenon has gathered pace since the beginning of this year, with total imports into the US from ASEAN countries exceeding those from China as a share of total imports (14.6% and 9.4% respectively). 

    The issue is that these countries remain reliant on foreign companies, which monopolise the export sector: in Vietnam, 70% of exporting companies are foreign-owned. This means that in the least capital-intensive sectors (i.e. those in which assets are amortised more quickly) where price competitiveness is paramount, multinationals are able to adapt their strategies to the prevailing tariff environment. Since no one can afford to let a neighbouring competitor country negotiate a better tariff; it was vital that a deal be done. 

    Trump then stopped off in South Korea, where he also had a very busy schedule: he attended the APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) summit, inked a new trade deal with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and, in particular, met with Xi Jinping for the first time since June 2019. Here again, a deal was announced, though its precise content remains to be clarified. 

    What do these deals entail?

    Unsurprisingly, these deals focus first and foremost on lowering so-called reciprocal tariffs: with the exception of Singapore, which runs a trade deficit with the US, ASEAN countries have secured tariffs of either 19% or 20%. The US’s South Korean and Japanese “allies” have fared slightly better, with tariffs of 15%. In particular, they have secured lower import tariffs (15%) on automotive goods, which are otherwise subject to a global US tariff of 25%, for which the US is their largest export market by far (accounting for 35% of Japan’s and nearly 50% of South Korea’s automotive exports).

    In exchange, the signatory countries have committed to abide by the US’s various priorities: importing more US goods, having domestic companies invest in the US and cooperating in strategic areas (naval, defence, rare earths). 

    South Korea: as well as preferential tariffs in the automotive sector, exemptions have been provided for in the timber, aerospace and pharmaceutical sectors. In return, South Korea has agreed to expand access to its market and step up its imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG). 

    South Korea has also committed to invest $350 billion in the US, consisting of $200 billion in cash and $150 billion in shipbuilding cooperation, including construction of nuclear submarines. This cooperation is crucial: the US needs South Korean expertise and production capacity to revive its shipbuilding industry, especially if it wants to increase its hydrocarbon exports (South Korean shipbuilders specialise in building tankers). 

    Malaysia has agreed to grant preferential access to American industrial and agricultural products. The US import tariff on Malaysian goods is 19% but numerous exceptions are in place for products the US considers “essential” such as pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, palm oil and rubber. Malaysia has also committed to increase its US imports (hydrocarbons and aerospace) and invest $70 billion in the US over the next ten years. 

    Above all, the deal includes a cooperation clause covering rare minerals. Malaysia, which currently accounts for 13% of global exports of rare earths and has reserves valued at over $200 billion, has agreed not to place any restrictions on exports to US firms to ensure they have access to stable and secure supplies. 

    Thailand has agreed to remove import tariffs on around 99% of US products entering its market and to remove non-tariff barriers in sectors of strategic importance to the US (notably automotive, pharmaceuticals and meat). It also plans to increase imports of US energy supplies, agricultural products and aircraft by a total of $27 billion. A Memorandum of Understanding on the supply of rare earths has also been made public, confirming that the US has negotiated a priority right to invest in this sector in Thailand. In exchange, the US is set to provide technical assistance to help the industry develop. 

    Vietnam has committed to offer preferential access to its market, notably in the automotive sector, by recognising US safety and emissions standards, as well as to its public procurement market (particularly in relation to medical devices). Unlike deals with other countries, the US-Vietnam deal does not appear to specify mandatory volumes of US imports, despite the fact that Vietnam has one of the highest bilateral surpluses with the US (over $100 billion). 

    However, Vietnam is in the firing line for the “rule of origin” the US wants to put in place targeting Chinese goods transiting through other countries, which would be tariffed at a rate of 40%. It remains to be seen whether a deal between China and the US would amend this clause.

    As we have seen, then, these countries have agreed to pay a heavy price to retain access to the US market, though questions remain as to just how the US intends to force foreign firms to invest on US soil or increase their imports of US goods. The example of the US-China Phase One deal shows that signing this kind of treaty is not an end in itself: imports of US goods into China have never reached the levels negotiated under this deal. 

    The case of China

    To say that the meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping was highly anticipated would be an understatement. It had been delayed several times, with misgivings initially appearing to come from the American side. However, the balance of power tipped after tensions escalated in April and May, and above all after China went on the offensive over rare earths. Xi Jinping appeared determined to wait for a credible deal to be negotiated before agreeing to a photo of a handshake with Trump “sealing the deal”. 

    After several rounds of talks, Xi Jinping announced that the two leaders had “reached consensus on solutions to problems”. The US will cut import tariffs on fentanyl from 20% to 10%. Meanwhile, China has committed to resume exports of rare earths and imports of soya.

    The deal thus signals a lull, though provides no real answers to US-China tensions. The rare earths deal will be renegotiated annually and, in any case, what would happen if either China or the US were to reverse course? With the WHO reduced to an empty shell, nations find themselves defenceless against a partner that might call into question or fail to abide by its obligations. For Donald Trump, import tariffs are simply a negotiating tool in a race to keep the US at the top of the global tree and outpace its rivals, starting with China. 

    While this deal will, in the short term, restore some much-needed visibility to economic agents, in no way does it mean the US-China clash is over. This is clearly reflected in the conclusions of China’s Fourth Plenum, held in Beijing last week: China is more than ever preparing itself for self-sufficiency and strategic autonomy. In this world of rivalry, the current détente can only be short-lived.

    1. ASEAN’s member countries are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Timor Leste and Vietnam.
    2.  “Reciprocal” import tariffs were calculated by dividing the trade balance with a given country by the amount of goods imported from that country.
  • Europe – 2025-2026 Scenario

    Against a backdrop of global growth that has been surprisingly resilient, Western European economies are showing resilience, albeit at varying rates. The economies at the core of the Eurozone, particularly Germany, are showing sluggish growth at best, while the Iberian economies are being buoyed by strong private consumption and investment, the latter supported by funds from the European Recovery and Resilience Plan. In the United Kingdom, growth was the strongest among the G7 countries in the first half of the year, but with modest growth in private consumption and a decline in investment. The pace of growth has slowed significantly since the pandemic, and the UK economy has yet to return to its trend GDP level or growth rate. In contrast, the Eurozone has now recovered the growth lost during the Covid shock and its growth rate has returned to its (low) pre-pandemic potential.

    This pace is ensured by the dynamism of labour supply, which is still meeting demand despite the slowdown in the cycle. The resilience of employment is essential to maintaining this narrative of cautious optimism. However, the latter is also supported in the Euro area by a more favourable economic policy stance and by the recovery in the credit cycle, which is fuelling the revival of investment. In the United Kingdom, on the contrary, persistently high inflation is forcing the central bank to halt its easing process, even as fiscal policy becomes more restrictive and the unemployment rate is expected to rise.

    The risks to our scenario of accelerating growth in the Euro area and a moderate slowdown in the United Kingdom are skewed to the downside. Although the EU and the UK have benefited from the most favourable terms among the new tariffs imposed by the United States on its trading partners, these remain punitive and uncertainty about future relations with the United States remains, with the confrontation with the Trump administration being hybrid and multifaceted, and potentially spreading to other fronts (FDI, digital services, financial stability, defence). Furthermore, the risk of Chinese trade flows being diverted from the American continent to Europe is emerging as the main deflationary threat to the continent.

    Euro area – A resilience stress test so far successful

    Despite sluggish consumption and a more unfavourable external environment, the Euro area recovery is continuing. Investment is expected to be the driving force behind the acceleration in growth, supported by European funds, defence spending and German public spending.

    Paola MONPERRUS-VERONI – Euro area Manager

    France – Political instability takes hold, activity holds up

    Growth surprised to the upside in the second quarter of 2025 and activity is expected to continue to grow moderately in the second half of the year. Despite the possible wait-and-see effects generated by uncertainty on the behaviour of private agents, activity is expected to accelerate on an annual basis in 2026. The trend will be driven by the impacts of German government measures and the increase in EU defence spending, as well as by an acceleration in private consumption and the resumption of business investment domestically.

    Marianne PICARD – France Economist

    Italy – An illusion of resilience

    In an uncertain international environment, the Italian economy is struggling to regain momentum. Growth forecasts for 2025 have been revised downwards, reflecting the growing impact of US tariffs on exports. Despite ongoing difficulties in the industrial sector, investment remains surprisingly robust in 2025. Consumption remains the weak link, hamperedby a less dynamic labour market and purchasing power that is still under pressure. For 2026, we expect a slight acceleration in growth, which will benefit, among other things, from the fiscal spillovers of the German Plan, whose knock-on effects will gradually support Italian economic activity.

    Sofia TOZY – Italy, Scandinavian countries Economist

    Spain – Growth refuses to slow down

    Rising wage costs, inflation contained by margin compression, and the gradual moderation of public investment define Spain's new economic framework. Domestic demand remains the primary driver of activity, supported by the resilience of private consumption and the dynamism of residential and productive investment, whilst public consumption maintains a moderate growth profile. External demand, weakened by the slowdown in global trade and the softening of goods exports, will limit its contribution to GDP, despite the persistent strength of services. The Spanish economy is thus entering a phase of growth more in line with its potential, characterised by a gradual normalisation of expansion rates.

    Ticiano BRUNELLO – Spain, Portugal, Greece Economist

    United Kingdom – More fiscal pain to come

    After a relatively strong first half of the year, the British economy is losing momentum. Household consumption growth is weak, and its fundamentals will be less favourable in the future. Households will need to rely more on their savings to maintain spending. The labour market is deteriorating and is therefore less conducive to wage increases. The government is expected to announce further tax increases in the Autumn Budget. The context remains inflationary, and the BoE is concerned about rising household inflation expectations. Future rate cuts may have to wait.

    Slavena NAZAROVA – United Kingdom, United States Economist

  • Morocco’s politicised youth are forcing the country to reckon with its contradictions

    After Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal1 and, more recently, Madagascar, Morocco’s Gen Z has arisen under the banner “GenZ212” (212 is Morocco’s international dialling code). This generation, born between 1997 and 2012, is riding the wave of a transnational uprising fuelled by aspirations for dignity and the rejection of old-style politics. In Morocco, this movement was born out of a general feeling of revolt after eight women died at a hospital in Agadir in September following Caesarean deliveries. It has come to symbolise the deterioration in public services. The movement quickly organised itself on social network Discord, with demonstrations taking place from 27 September onwards. 

    What’s surprising is how this online chat platform, mainly dedicated to gaming, has mutated into a genuine tool for political organisation, a kind of virtual parliament. Despite criticisms of a movement with no union representation, political party, leader or structure, the reality is that political awareness is high, collective power is being organised in new ways – a virtual participative democracy that represents a break from the traditional political architecture – and the movement’s leaders are choosing to remain anonymous. Discussion sessions are held every night, with moderators and note-takers. Anyone can ask to speak and each and all the movement’s decisions are put to the vote. One might thus feel a degree of admiration for this grassroots learning beyond the school gates, commitment and political organisation (take it from a millennial!). From Asia to Africa, these movements seem to indicate that the breakneck development of digital technologies will not necessarily and primarily be to the benefit of elites, who find it more difficult to navigate the landscape of political expression. In this sense, the Moroccan authorities are struggling to understand the movement and trying to bring it back within the institutional framework that governs political participation.

    Street rallies clearly highlight the paradoxical situation in which the country now finds itself, with all its contradictions: a situation in which an “emerging Morocco” is confronted with a “two-speed Morocco”. But what’s the reality behind these two slogans? And how does the education sector, cornerstone of social mobility, perfectly illustrate this paradox?

    “Emerging Morocco”: aiming to be a middle power

    In many respects, Morocco is firmly positioned as one of the region’s middle powers. Despite the recurrence and violence of recent shocks (Covid, the inflationary shock of the war in Ukraine, earthquake, repeated droughts, etc.), the country has established itself as an anchor of economic and political stability, whether seen as part of West Africa, North Africa or the Arab world2. Economically speaking, Morocco has cleverly inserted itself into the European nearshoring landscape, enabling it to develop new export-oriented sectors and attract investment in industries like automotive, aerospace and textiles. And this strategy is clearly starting to bear fruit. Over the period 2021-2024, exports of goods and services on average accounted for 41% of GDP, compared with 33.5% over the period 2016-20203. Morocco is benefiting as the new wave of “globalisation among friends” reconfigures production chains, leveraging its growing diplomatic influence. 

    One cannot help but note the recent strengthening of the European and, above all, US position on the issue of the Western Sahara, underpinned by the Abraham Accords signed in 2020. But Moroccan diplomacy is also working to diversify its partners, adroitly navigating the new paradigm of a fragmenting global order. Not only has the country forged a strategic partnership with Russia and secured its place in China’s Belt and Road initiative, it has also strengthened ties with the Gulf States and consolidated its economic network in Africa. Morocco is attempting to maximise the benefits of this balancing act (Israeli technology; US umbrella; European export markets and investment; financial support from the Gulf States) as it negotiates a complex situation (briefly participating in the war in Yemen but remaining neutral on the boycott of Qatar4; balancing the Abraham Accords against a strategy of co-opting the Muslim Brotherhood; abstaining from certain UN votes condemning Russia for its role in the conflict; etc.).

    Lastly, Morocco is leveraging soft power to consolidate its strategy of attaining the status of a middle power. There are a number of cards Morocco can play, including promoting its rich cultural and touristic heritage, organising festivals and leveraging its elite diaspora. More recently, it has been investing huge amounts of effort in sports soft power: it organised the Africa Cup of Nations 2025, its national team was a semi-finalist in the 2022 World Cup, and it is jointly hosting the 2030 World Cup alongside Spain and Portugal.

    However, this latter point has created some unease that has come to almost symbolise the youth uprising: there is no denying the sense of national pride fuelled by major sports events such as these. Yet, how is it that a country can marshal considerable resources to conjure up brand new sports stadiums in record time, yet people still die in hospital from routine medical procedures? “We want hospitals and schools, not just stadiums”, chant Morocco’s young people. This is reminiscent of the “Fifa Go Home” protests in Brazil in 2014.

    “Two-speed Morocco”: the challenge of inclusive growth 

    Without detracting from Morocco’s achievements over the past few years, a closer look at the economy suggests that this image of an “emerging Morocco” is, in practice, not incompatible with deteriorating social conditions. 

    Firstly, behind the narrative of Morocco as an anchor of stability, there is also the reality of a slowing economy. Having averaged 4.3% over the period 2004−2014, growth has subsequently flagged, averaging 2.5% over the period 2015−2024: a kind of cautious stagnation that seems to have long taken precedence over structural reform. The result is a growth model that is not creating enough jobs5. And, despite the emergence of new sectors over the past few years, the increasingly water-stressed agricultural sector is, unfortunately, destroying jobs more quickly that nearshoring can create them in urban areas. This is a major social challenge: the agricultural sector accounts for around 38% of the workforce and as much as 50% of the female workforce, where the participation rate is already very low (less than 25%). Consequently, unemployment has reached record levels, rising to 13.3% in 2024, its highest since the 1990s. 

    Behind this model of stability, there is also the reality of a structurally oligopolistic private sector, reinforced by high barriers to entry. The Special Commission behind the diagnosis that formed the basis for the New Development Model mandated by Mohammed VI in 20216 identified cumbersome regulations implemented in a lax and arbitrary way, public-private collusion in the allocation of authorisations and access to land and financial resources, and anti-competitive practices that had gone unchallenged. Its report noted “a partially locked economy, favouring vested interests and the maintenance of economic rents”. This situation incentivises informality and results in a lack of economic opportunities for a large proportion of young graduates. Young people aged between 15 and 25 – i.e. Gen Z – are by far the hardest hit by unemployment.

    This is the key to understanding the GenZ212 movement’s first demand: the resignation of the Akhannouch government. The billionaire businessman and heir to the Akwa Group, a privately owned conglomerate whose interests span the oil, real estate, tourism and media sectors, is the perfect embodiment of public-private collusion and the blurring of lines between business and politics. These are the mechanisms that have fuelled the development of a rentier economy for an entrepreneurial class that has become a social class in its own right. 

    To complete the picture, public services are deteriorating and, in particular, schools and public hospitals are failing. The rapid development of private healthcare and education services is accelerating this phenomenon by drawing away a portion of government spending and a majority of qualified personnel. This only adds to territorial and income inequalities and disparities in cultural capital.

    All this describes a “two-speed Morocco”. According to the National Observatory for Human Development7, the relative poverty rate, which is the proportion of households whose annual expenditure per person is less than 60% of the national median, was 17.7% in 2019 – a rate that has not changed in 20 years, contrary to the promise of trickle-down economics. This reflects deep inequalities in resource distribution, with the result that part of the population is living in poverty relative to other categories. Moreover, in 2019, 45% of Moroccans considered themselves poor – a dominant feeling in the bottom eight income deciles, reflecting a strong sense of inequality.

    The role of education in creating and perpetuating inequality

    Educational inequalities are particularly harmful because they create multidimensional barriers for disadvantaged people that affect their health, work, income and well-being at the individual, family and social levels. This is where the state school system should work to remedy social inequalities and prevent their proliferation. 

    In 2019, the Special Commission’s report sounded the alarm in relation to education and health: efforts to broaden access to education and healthcare were not matched by corresponding improvements in the quality of public services. Morocco’s education system continues to perform very poorly. In 2019, fewer than one third of students in state schools mastered the curriculum at the end of their primary education and barely 10% did so at the end of their lower secondary education. Meanwhile, the school dropout rate remains very high. As a result, Morocco has tumbled down the PISA rankings: out of 81 countries in 2023, the kingdom came 76th for science and 79th for reading comprehension. 

    Faced with the deterioration of public education, more and more underprivileged families are opting for private education, diverting a significant proportion of their income away from basic consumer products. A recent study published in Revue-IRS8 found that the commodification of education had brought greater visibility to educational inequalities stemming from social inequality.  

    Above all, though, this study sets out to demonstrate the intergenerational persistence of educational attainment and socioeconomic status. This is a crucial point because it indicates that education is no longer functioning as a driver of social mobility. 

    Our opinion

    Morocco currently faces a paradox, with two coexisting realities standing in opposition. On the one hand is an “emerging Morocco”, which has established itself as an anchor of stability in the region, is focused on exports, has secured a role in European nearshoring and China’s Belt and Road initiative, and is developing its diplomacy and leveraging its soft power; on the other is a “two-speed Morocco” where growth is no longer creating enough jobs to meet demand from young people entering the labour market, faltering public services (notably healthcare and education) are standing in the way of equal opportunities and hampering social mobility, and deep social and territorial inequalities persist. This diagnosis is no secret – it has featured in speeches by the king as well as reform documents (New Development Model) – but the mechanisms that maintain economic rents in the private sector are stubborn. It is those mechanisms that Morocco’s Gen Z protesters, buoyed by the transnational youth revolt, are intent on denouncing. Without calling into question the monarchy itself, they are holding the government to account and, inspired by this summer’s protests in Asia, using the tools of a connected youth to create new spaces for expression and political organisation. 

     

    References

    1. Read our article: “Népal : dans Katmandou calciné, la sortie de crise semble un nouvel Everest à gravir”, September 2025.
    2. Read our article: “Morocco: We can do it!”, May 2025.
    3. “Morocco Economic Monitor: Prioritizing Reforms to Boost the Business Environment”, World Bank, winter 2025.
    4. “Entre le Maroc et les pays du Golfe, une proximité régulièrement mise à l’épreuve”, Jeune Afrique, October 2025.
    5.  See note 1.
    6.  “The New Development Model: Releasing energies and regaining trust to accelerate the march of progress and prosperity for all”, General Report by the Special Commission on the Development Model, April 2021.
    7. “Dynamiques des niveaux de vie et de la pauvreté au Maroc : une analyse longitudinale”, ONDH.
    8.  “Les inégalités d’opportunités dans l’accès à l’éducation au Maroc : une analyse empirique”, Alazali and Bougroum, Revue Internationale de la Recherche Scientifique, 2024.
  • Donald Trump and his bankers

    Donald Trump is obsessed with the US trade deficit, which he blames on what he sees as unfair competition from surplus countries – such as China and Germany – at the expense of American interests. In his logic, protectionism and tariff barriers are a necessary and, as he sees it, effective lever for rebalancing bilateral trade. However, the trade war launched by Trump during his first term highlighted the limitations of this approach. Contrary to expectations, the trade deficit has not narrowed; if anything, it has widened. While tariffs may temporarily slow imports, they do not address the root of the problem, namely the structural domestic savings deficit. In other words, the United States is living beyond its means and must rely on foreign savings to maintain its standard of living.

    The twin deficits – budget and external – have so far been financed without difficulty thanks to foreign investors’ sustained appetite for dollar-denominated assets. As issuer of the main global reserve currency – the dollar – and provider of risk-free assets – Treasuries – the US plays a central role in the international monetary system. This dominant position helps support global demand for dollar-denominated reserve assets, enabling the US to borrow from overseas investors on preferential terms. This is what’s known as the “exorbitant privilege” enjoyed by the US by virtue of its own currency being the international reserve currency.

    However, this recycling of global savings in US markets hinges on the confidence placed in dollar-denominated assets. This confidence is sensitive to shared emotional dynamics: it can fluctuate with the perceptions and beliefs that influence investor behaviour. That means episodes of fear or doubt – linked to political instability, the risk of a budget crisis or a loss of US institutional credibility – could weaken this confidence, prompting investors to shun US assets or demand higher risk premiums and thus endangering the US’s ability to borrow more cheaply in international markets.

    To illustrate this point, reactions to the tariff announcements on “Liberation Day” offered a glimpse of what might happen if confidence in the dollar were to erode. Traditionally, dollar-denominated assets serve as a safe haven at times of uncertainty, causing the dollar to strengthen and interest rates to fall. This time around, the opposite happened: the dollar declined and bond markets tightened, signalling the beginnings of investor panic. This growing distrust of dollar assets is a warning sign, made all the more worrying by the unpredictability of Trump’s actions and policies, which are hardly conducive to a lasting climate of confidence. In this connection, it’s worth remembering that around one third of market-tradeable US debt is held by foreign investors, which means any change in sentiment could have major repercussions.

    Investors are concerned by Trump’s repeated attacks on the Fed’s independence. Subjecting monetary policy to that kind of pressure is liable to compromise its credibility, particularly if it results in artificially low interest rates out of step with prevailing economic conditions. Mounting inflationary pressures could then cause expectations to become unanchored, prompting investors to demand a higher inflation premium to make up for the erosion in the real value of their bond portfolios. 

    Similarly, the weak dollar policy advocated by Trump – under the influence of his economic adviser Stephen Miran, now a member of the Fed’s Board of Governors – could undermine the dollar’s credibility as the international monetary system’s base currency. His proposed Mar-a-Lago Accord, inspired by the Plaza and Louvre Accords of the 1980s, aims to orchestrate a dollar depreciation while putting pressure on official creditors to invest in zero-coupon 100-year Treasuries. The possibility of this kind of disguised restructuring of debt risks compromising the attractiveness of dollar-denominated assets.

    By dint of being pressured by the world’s leading financial power through policies of intimidation and even extortion, the US’s creditors could prove less inclined to cheaply finance American budgetary largesse. Rising risk premiums could jeopardise the sustainability of the debt trajectory, forcing the authorities to make unpopular political choices. Moreover, while the idea that there is no credible alternative to the dollar remains valid today, from a longer-term perspective it is more of a belief than a historical certainty: key currencies are not immortal. In any event, Donald Trump would do well to meditate on the commonsense principle that it’s always best to stay on good terms with one’s banker.

  • World – Macro-economic scenario 2025-2026

    In an international environment that is still as anxiety-provoking as ever, uncertainties remain, numerous and multifaceted. Nevertheless, hoping that those emanating from US economic policy will calm down (and that at least tariffs will stabilise), the scenario is staying the course. It is characterised by a slowdown without recession in the US, followed by an acceleration in 2026, a continued recovery in the Eurozone thanks to investment support and, while China in the grip of ‘involution’ is seeing its growth performance erode, an ‘emerging universe’ that continues to show unprecedented resilience.

    In the US, the first half of the year was turbulent in terms of both sentiment and growth: after having been lulled by the successes promised by the ‘US exception’ and the privileges offered by the status of the USD, investors expressed their disaffection at the end of the sensational ‘Liberation Day’.  From an economic point of view, in anticipation of aggressive tariffs, imports jumped in Q1, before falling sharply: they weighed on growth before providing support. After falling by 0.6% in Q1 (annualised quarterly variation), GDP grew by 3.8% in Q2.

    And yet, the broad outlines of our US scenario, based on the foreseeable timetable of the Trump administration's radical economic decisions, have not changed: a slowdown this year (aggressive tariff increases, anti-immigration policy, inflation), then a slight rebound next year (support provided by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, deregulation). Our scenario thus assumes average annual growth of 1.7% in 2025, down significantly from 2.8% in 2024, before an acceleration to 2% in 2026. The current deceleration is accompanied by a weakening of the labour market. While the pace of job creation is slowing, layoffs remain moderate, as are the upward pressures on the unemployment rate. The latter could reach a peak of around 4.5% by the end of the year.

    Despite the still limited adjustment in the labour market, attention has recently focused on the growing vulnerability of employment, to the point of overshadowing concerns about inflation. However, tariffs, at their maximum impact point, would add nearly 80bp to the increase in prices over one year. The impulse would be largely temporary but could drive headline and core inflation towards 3.2% by the end of 2025. Inflation would still significantly exceed the 2% target at the end of 2026: our forecasts place core and headline inflation at around 2.9% and 2.7% respectively. It is therefore bold to assume that the Fed will neglect the inflation component of its mandate in favour of the employment component alone.

    In the Eurozone, despite the reluctance of consumption and a more unfavourable external environment, the recovery continues. Echoing US behaviour, sustained growth (2.4% in annualised quarterly variation), fuelled by a rebound in exports in Q1, was followed by a sharp cooling, which nevertheless left growth in positive territory (0.4%) and offered a comfortable carryover. Even if the repercussions of tariffs (ultimately less aggressive than feared) continue to weigh slightly on Q3, progress already achieved now allows us to expect GDP growth of 1.3% in 2025, the pace of which should be maintained in 2026.

    Past resilience is related to domestic demand: it has weakened but is at a slightly higher pace than its long-term trend, and investment, in particular, has weathered uncertainty well. As for the scenario of maintaining growth at its potential pace, it is based, above all, on investment, driven by European funds, defence spending and the German recovery plan. In contrast, the impact of the Turnberry trade agreement, concluded this summer between the EU and the US, would be marginally negative, subtracting 0.1ppt from growth in 2026 compared to our previous scenario.

    In a context that should have clearly weakened them, the economies of the ‘emerging bloc’ continue to hold up well. They are benefiting from the disaffection with the USD, which is easing pressure on their currencies and interest rates (local and USD), from disinflation and from the good performance of their labour markets. Their growth could thus approach an average of 3.9% in 2025 and 2026: a good performance that should not lead one to underestimate (or even to forget) the fragilities. These economies remain exposed to a potential market shock, they face a downward trend in their average growth and will have to adapt to a new competitive environment while dealing with the Chinese trajectory: the risks linked to the phenomenon of ‘involution’ go beyond China alone and fuel the fear of deflation exported to Asia.

    In China, the persistent weakness in consumption, the prolonged correction in the real estate market and overcapacity in various sectors (steel, electric vehicles, solar or electronics) continue to fuel deflationary pressures, particularly visible on producer prices, which could fall by 2.6% in 2025. This phenomenon, called ‘involution’, is now officially ‘denounced’ by the authorities, who want to curb excessive price competition and tackle overcapacity. The first impact of the ‘anti-involution campaign’ was to reduce the fall in producer prices, without any major stimulus effect on demand. Even if support measures are being stepped up, many of them are structural reforms and their positive impact on inflation will not be felt immediately. Inflation is expected to remain almost non-existent at 0.1% in 2025, before rising to 0.6% in 2026. Due to the increase in US tariffs, the persistent weakness of domestic demand and despite various shock absorbers (reorientation of Chinese exports, resilience of global demand, support provided by the policy mix), growth is expected to continue to slow from 5% in 2024 to 4.8% in 2025 and 4.4% in 2026.

    On the monetary policy side, this is not the time for relaxation. In the US, the resilience of inflation is likely to disillusion the proponents of rapid and massive monetary easing. In the Eurozone, inflation towards target and the recovery, albeit modest, argue in favour of a status quo, followed by tightening, albeit still a long way off. Anxious to avoid second-round effects, the BoE could postpone its next rate cut. As for Japan, while moving away, rate hikes remain on the agenda.

    Specifically, in the US, our scenario is for a further cut before the end of the year, lowering the upper bound of the Fed Funds rate range to 4%, at which point the Fed is expected to pause throughout 2026. This scenario is quite far from that of the market (which anticipates 110bp b of cuts by the end of 2026) and considers, in particular, that the checks and balances seem sufficient to allow the Fed to resist the pressure of the Trump administration. As for the ECB, in June it lowered its deposit and refinancing rates to 2% and 2.15% respectively, levels at which it is expected to maintain them before raising them slightly, when the economic improvement poses a risk of inflationary pressures. This increase would only take place after the recovery is over, and therefore not before the end of 2026 at the earliest.

    Interest rates are expected to come under moderate upward pressure. In the US, the possible resurgence of inflationary concerns and disappointed hopes of massive monetary easing could result in a modest rise in interest rates coupled with a flattening of the curve. Encouraged by European growth that is more resilient than expected, then supported by fiscal expansion in Germany, this movement is expected to spread to the Eurozone.

    In our US scenario, the yield on 2Y Treasury bonds, which has room to rise, is expected to reach 3.70% by the end of 2025. Also at the end of 2025, the 10Y yield on US Treasuries would be at 4.30%, but the 30Y rate (4.85%) would struggle to cross the ‘psychological threshold’ of 5%, thanks to demand from pension funds. The German 10Y yield (Bund) is expected to reach 2.80%. The revamping of the hierarchy between Eurozone sovereigns would continue with a spread against the Bund of 50bpfor Spain, on the one hand, and 75bp for France and Italy, on the other.

    Finally, weighed down by a wave of disenchantment in the wake of the sensational ‘Liberation Day’, as well as by certainly exaggerated expectations of monetary easing, the USD suffered. While capital inflows to the US have not dried up and the easing is likely to be less than expected, the USD could ‘smile again’. However, patience is needed before the EUR depreciates: our scenario assumes that the EUR against the USD would be close to recent highs at the end of 2025 (1.17), before falling in 2026 (towards 1.10 at the end of the year).

  • China: behind involution lie deep-seated economic imbalances

    A new term has established itself in the Chinese economic lexicon: involution, denoting a situation of economic stagnation despite intensifying effort. 

    To use a metaphor suggested by Deutsche Bank1, imagine a full theatre where everyone is seated until one person stands up to get a better view, quickly forcing everyone in the auditorium to do likewise. The end result is that the entire audience is once again equal but now standing instead of seated. 

    In China’s case, this takes the form of intense competition leading to diminishing returns for all participants. In game theory, this would mean the players in a given sector deciding to step up their efforts without any additional gain, where failing to do so would mean being eliminated from the competition: a kind of Pareto suboptimality2 where a state of equilibrium is reached but through disproportionate means.

    In China, the most visible manifestation of involution is the relentless price war companies have engaged in, triggering an unprecedently long episode of deflation. Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for curbs on this “disorderly” competition, which is acting as a drag on the economy. However, its roots go deep and reveal structural problems to which the Chinese economy has found no solution.

    The origins of involution

    The roots of involution lie in cut-throat competition between companies in one sector since 2020. With the Chinese economy severely disrupted by Covid, the authorities opted – as they often do – for supply-side stimulus. The construction sector was already under pressure: in spring 2020, the authorities published their so-called red lines preventing many developers from raising debt to finance new projects or repay earlier debt. At the same time, Beijing launched its “dual circulation” strategy aimed at developing China’s production capability, with a particular focus on the “new productive forces” identified in the five-year plan: electric vehicles, batteries and solar panels. 

    In short, then, a combination of three factors is at play: available public funds; a shift in investment stimulus away from the traditional construction sector and towards manufacturing; and the emergence of new transition-related sectors, part of whose output will be exported, to conquer new market segments. 

    The removal of some market barriers to entry, particularly in the automative sector, and local government involvement also facilitate the emergence of new players. It is clear that the “new productive forces” will ultimately be driven by private companies, with the State never far behind. 

    On paper, the intentions behind this strategy are laudable: China is seeking to develop new sectors and the State is supporting this shift by providing liquidity and subsidies. The rules of the game have been simplified to leave more room for natural competition and foster the development of new companies. However, the current climate shows that this policy has ultimately failed to deliver the expected results. 

    What hasn’t worked 

    Support for new sectors has mutated into fierce competition among players, resulting in excess production capacity, a price war and a consequent decline in company profitability. 

    Involution is a result of two concurrent phenomena: oversupply and weak domestic demand. 

    On the supply side, the shift to more local control and government subsidies has created a climate of competition between provinces and even between prefecture-level cities (an administrative division consisting of an urban core and surrounding rural areas) to develop and subsequently support a champion, resulting in projects being duplicated across similar sectors and the market quickly reaching saturation point.

    Local governments have offered land and tax exemptions and even invested directly in some companies. Those same companies have in turn helped them achieve their targets in terms of GDP, employment and tax take despite not being sufficiently productive. Chinese bankruptcy legislation is still in its infancy and not very effective. It is difficult for a supplier or creditor to initiate legal proceedings to recover assets, even if the counterparty has already defaulted. 

    The result is a two-fold change. One the one hand, instead of barriers to entry, there are poorly regulated exit barriers for companies; on the other hand, local governments have tended to protect their champions, despite their difficulties, to ensure that their overall performance is not affected and that they meet their growth targets. All this has dampened the mergers, acquisitions and consolidation activity that would normally be expected to take place in a sector in a state of overcapacity. 

    The upshot is that companies have engaged in an intense price war that risks leaving them all in a weakened state. The case of the automotive sector is perhaps the most symptomatic of the phenomenon of involution. Auto manufacturers’ profits declined by 33% between 2017 and 2024, while sales increased by 21% over the same period. The industry’s net profit margins also plummeted from 8% to 4.3%. 

    The other side of the coin is weak domestic demand. China has been going through a crisis of consumer confidence since 2020. Consumers were hit first by Covid-19 and then by the real estate crisis. The job market has become more uncertain, especially for young graduates, and the trend towards setting aside precautionary savings has become even more pronounced. The lack of a real social protection system and the fact that access to public services is contingent on having a residence permit (hukou) are among the obstacles holding back the propensity to consume. Falling prices and the slump in real estate transactions – with the real estate market serving as an investment for most Chinese households – were all the incentive that was needed for households to watch their spending. 

    The State’s response was both tardy and lacking. The authorities launched a huge programme of subsidies for consumer goods (electronic devices, household appliances and electric vehicles). These subsidies kept retail sales figures artificially high, particularly during the second quarter of 2025. But their effects are already fading – it will take a lot more than the global Labubu phenomenon to get Chinese people excited about spending again3 : retail sales are once again growing more slowly than the economy. The hardest hit categories are precisely those that were covered by subsidy programmes, notably household equipment and mobile phones. 

    Combating involution

    This is not the first time China has had to contend with involution. It happened before in the late 1990s, when China opened up its economy to the world and had to manage large and inefficient state-owned enterprises that were not compatible with changes in the economy, and again in 2015–2016 in the steel and cement sectors. Each time, the authorities intervened and agreed to cut production in affected sectors despite the ensuing job losses. 

    This time, though, the situation is different. Firstly, the production capacity in question – whether for solar panels or electric vehicles – was only installed very recently. This means it is far from being fully depreciated, especially in light of the significant capital expenditure incurred, particularly during the research and development phase. In 2015, the sectors in question were among the most outdated and in the upstream part of most value chains. 

    Secondly, unlike in the previous examples, this time around most of the production capacity is privately owned: private companies own 95% of the solar energy and battery market and 65% of the electric vehicle market, compared with 35% of the steel market and 50% of the cement market. While the Chinese State remains highly interventionist, it cannot interfere in the affairs of the private sector – especially given that, once again, the lack of a clear regulatory framework around bankruptcy impedes its freedom to act. 

    The deflation China is experiencing now is also much deeper than it was in 2015: the GDP deflator has declined for nine consecutive quarters, compared with just two in 2015, while year-to-date average inflation comes in at -0.1%, compared with 1.5% in 2015. In fact, this is the first time producer and consumer prices have simultaneously been so low for so long. The producer price index has been in decline since January 2023, while the annual change in the consumer price index has not exceeded 1% since February 2024. 

    In 2016, China was also helped by the recovery in international trade. This time around, the cycle looks less promising. 

    Trade tensions have multiplied. Exports to the US have already declined steeply. For the time being, this decline has been offset by exports via backdoor countries (notably ASEAN countries and Mexico) and to new markets, particularly in the European Union; the latter is already casting around for ways to stem this wave of goods, which is likely to further erode its industrial base. 

    To prevent involution contaminating other sectors, the Chinese authorities are pursuing a multi-pronged approach focused on a number of key areas: 

    • Legal framework: amending legislation on unfair competition by tightening the ban on selling goods at a loss and preventing larger companies from abusing their market power
       
    • Self-discipline: working with industry groups in the relevant sectors to organise concerted voluntary cuts in production and shorten supplier payment terms so that the 60-day rule becomes the norm and is universally adopted
       
    • Employment law: enforcing labour law, shortening working hours, capping overtime and encouraging employees to take annual leave 

    These measures, together with the change in tone from authorities right up to the highest levels, may have an incentivising effect. Even so, the sectors in question will not be able to sidestep the need for a real effort to adjust their production capacity. This requires a profound paradigm shift in how economic policy is conducted: it means accepting lower growth targets and identifying growth drivers not confined to the manufacturing and infrastructure sectors. In any event, rebalancing a system increasingly debilitated by its excesses will require both reducing supply and boosting demand.

    Our opinion

    The return of involution is not surprising: it reflects the priorities of a Chinese economy focused on supporting supply and investment, obsessed with generating returns and meeting targets set out in the many sectoral and local iterations of China’s five-year plans. To give credit where it is due, China’s gamble has partly paid off: it is utterly dominant in the battery, solar panel and electric vehicle sectors. The wider outcome remains much less certain. 

    The all-pervading power of central planning is undermined by its own excesses: the existence of growth targets, competition for subsidies at every level of the administration, and the requirement to deliver results have prompted local governments, in conjunction with businesses, to leave surplus production capacity in place. The lack of mechanisms for market exit – a notion at odds with a managed economy – also hampers efforts to regulate the market. The ensuing involution and deflation stem from these profound imbalances, which hark back to the roots of the Chinese model. Eliminating them would require a complete paradigm shift, particularly with regard to how quantitative targets are set. The presentation of the next five-year plan at the parliamentary sessions in March 2026 will serve as a litmus test of whether the apparent concerns of China’s leadership are translated into concrete economic policy.

    References

    1. Understanding China's "Anti-involution" Drive - Deutsche Bank, September 2025
    2. Pareto optimality is the state in which resources are allocated in such a way that no economic agent can be made better off without another being made worse off.
    3. Labubu: the tiny elf doll driving China’s most valuable toy company, Financial Times, June 2025
  • Trump is right about the diagnosis but wrong about the remedies

    Growing global imbalances now pose a risk to global economic and financial stability. These imbalances are reflected in persistent divergences between countries’ current account balances, with large deficits in the United States but surpluses in China and Europe. Although they point to divergences in trade balances, these imbalances act like a mirror, mainly reflecting structural disparities between savings and investment levels. The global accumulation of these imbalances exposes the financial system to the risk of a crisis in the event of a sudden reversal, as has happened in the past. 

    Before the 2008 crisis, global excess savings – often referred to as a savings glut – contributed to an across-the-board decline in interest rates. This environment encouraged undue risk-taking as well as the excessive accumulation of debt, driven by a wave of unbridled financial innovation intended to push back the traditional limits of borrowing. This mechanism fuelled huge real estate and credit bubbles, which were notably at the heart of the subprime crisis. The roots of the eurozone sovereign debt crisis also lay in imbalances within the zone, with southern European countries building up large external deficits financed by excess savings in northern European countries looking for lucrative investments. This model, built on growing imbalances, fell apart when these capital flows came to a sudden stop amid a climate of increased distrust towards heavily indebted countries, Greece being a case in point. 

    It is thus critically important to identify the specific causes of each country’s external imbalances so they can be addressed with minimal disruption.

    From this perspective, Donald Trump, long preoccupied – not to say obsessed – with the US trade deficit, appropriately diagnosed it as an anomaly to be corrected. However, he is mistaken about the remedies: protectionism and tariff barriers will do nothing to resolve the US savings deficit that is behind the country’s trade imbalance. There is simply no denying it: Americans are living beyond their means. Consumers are overspending while the government deficit deepens. This combination of low private savings and high public dissaving leads to a structural savings deficit whereby the country is unable to fund its investments, thus chronically fuelling its external deficit. Rebalancing the external accounts means reducing the public deficit – a direction diametrically opposed to the one taken by Trump with his One Big Beautiful Bill Act and its huge tax cuts. Any deepening of the public deficit will worsen external imbalances and thus entail greater reliance on foreign savings. 

    On the other side of the looking-glass, China has a large current account surplus as a result of its export-led economic model, supported by structurally high private savings. In the short term, with consumer spending weakened by the real estate crisis, Chinese growth continues to depend on external demand. Looking further ahead, putting the model on a balanced and sustainable footing will require boosting domestic consumption, supported by an increase in social safety nets and public services, so as to reduce the need for precautionary savings. This shift to a more self-sustaining and independent growth model should help shrink external imbalances and reduce excess savings to be invested in foreign markets. 

    The eurozone is the other major region with persistent external surpluses, mainly driven by Germany’s large trade surpluses. While private savings are plentiful and budget deficits are generally under control (except in France), the eurozone is mainly afflicted by a lack of investment and innovation, making it vulnerable in the face of Chinese and US strategic ambitions. If it is to stay in the race for power and regain its strategic autonomy, Europe must invest heavily not only in the defence and energy sectors but also in digital infrastructure, cutting-edge technologies and the industries of the future. In this regard, Germany’s unprecedently large stimulus plan could kick-start a rebalancing by putting domestic savings to work in investments targeted at reinventing its economic model. At the European level, beyond the idea of mutualising future debt, the creation of a savings and investment union appears essential if the European Union is to finance collective investment efforts from its own funds rather than seeing its capital flood into US markets.

    This interplay between savings surpluses and deficits appears to offer a logical or coherent explanation for the persistence of global imbalances. Donald Trump would nevertheless be well advised to be very careful how he handles the United States’ creditors, who, faced with his threats of intimidation and extortion, could decide to prioritise rebalancing their internal finances over continuing to fund US debt. That kind of financing freeze would force the US to make painful adjustments, not without risks to global financial stability.

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