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‘Trump Effect’ is already shaping events around the world

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ASSOCIATED PRESS This Oct. 30, 2014, file photo shows the Deutsche Bank headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany.

JERUSALEM >> Within days of Donald Trump’s election to the presidency, Jerusalem’s city planning chief declared an end to the era of holding up new housing for Jewish residents in contentious neighborhoods out of deference to American objections.

Last week, he followed through, advancing a long-delayed plan to build 500 homes, a down payment on thousands more to come. The mayor’s office insisted that the timing was coincidental and the decision not political. But the planning chief made clear that he saw a green light to proceed “now that Trump” had won.

Call it the Trump Effect. Around the world, his election is already shaping events — or at least perceived to be shaping them — even though he will not take office for seven more weeks. Companies hoping to profit from Trump’s economic policies have seen shares soar. Countries fearing his anti-trade stance have seen the value of their currencies plunge against the dollar. Governments are recalibrating policies on trade, defense and immigration.

The behavior of the global markets toward Trump has been uneven. By Monday, the dollar was slipping and bond markets were rallying, partly over a rethinking about whether Trump’s presidency will result in inflation, an expectation that many traders have been calling Trumpflation.

Much of the markets’ mixed reaction reflects uncertainty about a new president who has never held public office, leaving political leaders, business executives and international institutions to make bets on how a Trump administration may rewrite rules that have governed global affairs under American presidents of both parties.

“For allies and adversaries alike, the election of Donald Trump represents the likely abandonment of a decades-old U.S. commitment to uphold the global order,” said Ivo Daalder, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO who is now president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

For some, there was initially a promising forecast. U.S. and foreign stock markets climbed in what some analysts called “the Trump bump.” The Dow Jones industrial average has broken several records since the election, and last week topped 19,000 for the first time amid expectations of more business-friendly regulatory policies. Investment banks like Goldman Sachs have fared particularly well.

European firms have seen stock prices rise, too. Deutsche Bank, whose shares shot up as high as 17 percent after the election, has reasons for optimism beyond its longtime ties to Trump’s businesses. With the Justice Department seeking a $14 billion settlement from the bank for its handling of mortgage-backed securities in the 2008 financial crisis, some in Germany hope a new administration will ease up on business.

Another company that has seen its share value increase since the election is Magal Security Systems, an Israeli firm that helped develop high-tech security barriers around Gaza and the West Bank. With Trump’s promise to build a wall along the border with Mexico, investors expect that firms like Magal could get some of the business. Magal’s shares rose as high as 24 percent above their pre-election level, with trading volume as much as 150 times higher.

For the same reason, Mexico has taken an economic hit since the election. Besides the wall, Trump has vowed to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement. Mexico’s peso has fallen sharply and its central bank last week slashed its growth projection for next year, citing “the electoral process in the United States.”

Other economies have reacted with trepidation. In India, the rupee last week sank to an all-time low. Multiple factors were cited, but among them were fears that Trump’s policies may drive up inflation and interest rates.

Some countries are trying to figure out how to respond in other ways. Leaders of NATO allies are looking at increasing military spending in response to Trump’s insistence that they pay a greater share of their defense. Lithuania last week chose a new prime minister who renewed the nation’s promise to raise security spending.

In the Philippines, where President Rodrigo Duterte has feuded with President Barack Obama, the government has tried to gain favor in Trump’s Washington. Duterte named as his new trade envoy to the United States Jose E.B. Antonio, a real estate tycoon who is helping build Trump Tower Manila. After Britain rebuffed Trump’s suggestion to name Nigel Farage, a leader of the Brexit campaign to leave the European Union, as ambassador to the United States, the Times of London reported that Farage may move to America anyway.

In many places, there is still much head scratching over Trump. The mass-circulation Bild Zeitung in Germany secured exclusive rights to translating into German the whole interview Trump gave to The New York Times. Bungeishunju, the Japanese publisher of “Trump Revealed,” by the Washington Post journalists Michael Kranish and Marc Fisher, reprinted an additional 10,000 copies.

In China, initial optimism about Trump is giving way to skepticism. “We should stop imagining what benefits Trump’s election could bring to China,” Zhu Chenghu, a retired major general, said at a seminar at the China Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing on Friday. “He will return to the traditional policies that rely on the role of the U.S. dollar and seek expansion overseas.”

Trump’s election is getting credit, or blame, for all sorts of events, no matter how tangential. In Russia, a newspaper interviewed an analyst who suggested that the arrest of a Cabinet minister on bribery charges may have resulted from Trump’s success because Moscow no longer had to fear going after protégés of reformers who were once close to Washington.

Nowhere has the Trump Effect been more visible than in Jerusalem, where the political right has openly rejoiced at the election. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has had a prickly relationship with Obama, has made clear to associates that he is overjoyed at Trump’s ascension.

Members of Netanyahu’s coalition expect Trump to abandon the practice of Obama and presidents of both parties who tried to restrain Israel from building housing in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Shortly after the election, a Trump adviser said settlements were not an obstacle to peace, appearing to have adopted the argument Netanyahu makes.

“The next few weeks present a unique window of opportunity for Israel,” Naftali Bennett, who leads a pro-settler party in Netanyahu’s Cabinet, told a conference sponsored by The Jerusalem Post last week. After years of American pressure, he added, “It’s ours to decide.”

Betty Herschman, the director of international relations for Ir Amim, a group that opposes settlement construction, said it was too early to know what Trump’s policy would actually be. But she said one thing was clear: “The Israeli right is already celebrating.”

A case in point was last week’s decision on 500 new housing units in Ramat Shlomo, an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of annexed East Jerusalem across the “green line” delineating the border that existed until Israel won the 1967 war. The development had been in the works for years without being built. An announcement that it would proceed in 2010 while Vice President Joe Biden was visiting Israel infuriated Obama and his team.

Brachie Sprung, a spokeswoman for Mayor Nir Barkat, said last week’s action by the municipal planning committee was a result of the developer’s coming back to the city with revisions to his plan that required new approval.

“There has been no political statement here with this piece of land,” she said.

But it was easy to see the move in the context of the emerging Trump era. Meir Turgeman, the deputy mayor who leads the planning committee, had just days earlier promised to advance 7,000 housing units that were delayed under U.S. pressure and he named Ramat Shlomo as an example.

“I intend to exploit the change of the guard in the USA and bring them to approval,” Turgeman told Israel’s Channel 2. Until now, he said, there had been pressure from Netanyahu’s office not to proceed to avoid angering Washington. “That’s over. From now, we intend to take the plans out of deep freeze.”

18 responses to “‘Trump Effect’ is already shaping events around the world”

  1. Keonigohan says:

    Is O going to BUTT_his_face into what’s happening trying to desperately take credit…saying it was because of his policies that the World is now catching on to the excitement?
    Or is he f@rtless…thinking is this how a leader does it?
    Or is he going to blah blah blah whatever?
    So many questions.

    #MAGA

    • NanakuliBoss says:

      Why you worry about obama? Are you trolling him. You have ur nose so far up his ask, ur face looks like rainbow shave ice. As you say, he’s gone in 2 months.

  2. MoiLee says:

    Many “Positive Effects” will take place under this administration,at home and the abroad. Look at the stock market, We’ve never seen numbers like these in a while. I get a kick out of this,many bankers and investors are calling it: “The Trump Effect”.
    Now only IF Half the of the American people can coalesce around our President Elect, as one…..we’ll be just fine.

    • Keonigohan says:

      Agree.

      My money says boots will arrive to give the credit to his anointed ONE! lol

    • kuroiwaj says:

      IRT MoiLee, I did not expect this change in foreign countries to take place this early. We can see the impact of the liberal progressive Hawaii born President Obama and his regressive policies impacting the entire World. All the citizens of the many Countries can now evaluate their leaders and make appropriate changes. Hawaii born President Obama has set the liberal progressive movement back decades and let’s work to never let America slide back into its sick social and fiscal situation. Let’s work to Make America Safe and Great Again.

  3. nomu1001 says:

    We wonder how many world leaders and business partnerships, because of Trump’s cavalier attitude towards conflicts of interest, will someday be in a position to literally choose when and where it’s in their own best interests to expose Trump and show the world that he indeed placed his own personal interests before the best interests of the people of this country?

    What will that mean for our democracy?

    • thos says:

      nomu1001 asks: What will that mean for our democracy?

      Won’t mean a dang thing, nomu, primarily because ours is not a democracy.

      Doubt that?

      Repeat after me:

      “I Pledge allegiance,
      To the flag,
      Of the United States of America.
      And to the [ fill in this blank ],
      For which it stands . . . “
      &c. &c.

      See until you muster the wherewithal to master such simple, straight forward basics about your own country and use that elemental knowledge on which to premise your questions, you will risk presenting your self as careless and slipshod.

    • calentura says:

      Maybe, just maybe, Trump will go broke while in the white house, kinda like the Clintons.

  4. lespark says:

    Trump has done more in 8 weeks than Obama has done in 8 years. Obama belongs in an insane asylum.

  5. ready2go says:

    As the old saying goes, “talk is cheap –let’s see what he can do”! The campaigning is over. Now it’s time to act.

  6. klastri says:

    Mr. Trump now wants to cancel the citizenship of a person or put them in jail if they burn a U.S. flag.

    Mr. Trump is a psychotic who has obviously never read the Constitution. Supporting him is now bordering on treason.

    • MoiLee says:

      I like that idea! Why ? Because it is disrespectful to the people of this country “To The Max”! And especially to the Military families members who’s family members Died trying defend it ….Our Flag.

      This nothing new.
      The late Supreme Court Justice. Antonin Scalia tried to put something forth,irt “Flag Burning”. So take heart,With President Trump in office,with regards to the New supreme court justices he’s going to appoint. There is a good Chance this issue will come into fruition. Can it happen? Maybe or…..Maybe Not?

    • kuroiwaj says:

      IRT Klastri, wow, I truly support President-elect Trump on this issue. I believe the Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court must revisit the burning of the American Flag. The burning of the American Flag is not Free Speech.

  7. Buckykat says:

    Why is this in a “Business Breaking News” section when it’s obviously an opinion piece?

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