Comedy Central
- Christine Lagarde shared her views on topics including climate change, the US-China trade war, and the gender pay gap in an interview on the Daily Show with Trevor Noah.
- The managing director of the International Monetary Fund said President Donald Trump has made a couple of fair points about US trade with China.
- She joked the impact of tariffs on global growth could be equivalent to removing Noah’s home country of South Africa from the planet.
- We’ve gathered her comments on five topics below.
- View Markets Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Donald Trump ‘has a point’ in his trade war with China
NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP/Getty Images
Donald Trump hasn’t been totally off the mark in his claims about unfair trade between the US and China, Lagarde said.
"President Trump has a point on intellectual property. It is correct that nobody should be stealing intellectual property to move ahead," she said. "He has a point on subsidies, you cannot just go about competing with others out there that are heavily subsidized."
"On these points clearly the game has to change, the rules have to be respected," Lagarde said, adding that there need to be "adults in the room" for trade talks.
However, she argued that tariff hikes are unwise as they hurt US companies importing goods rather than China, and "the ultimate person who will bear the brunt of those tariff increases are the consumers, and particularly the low-income consumers, those who need to actually buy reasonably cheap products."
Lagarde also framed the impact of tariffs on the global economy specifically for the South African comedian. The IMF estimates a 25% tariff on all trade between the US and China would "shave off about half a percentage point of growth," she said. "That’s the equivalent of removing South Africa from the planet."
$5 trillion are being spent on subsidies to burn fossil fuel
Steffen M. Olsen and DMI
After Lagarde identified climate change as a key global challenge, Noah asked her how she could begin to address it.
"Around the world you have roughly 5 trillion dollars that are being spent on subsidies to burn fossil fuel," Lagarde replied. "This is not a good use of public finance."
"Instead of that you should put that money in health, in education, in hospitals, in infrastructure," she said.
Reducing inequality would boost economic growth
Spencer Platt/Getty
Noah asked Lagarde how investing in education, infrastructure, and health could boost economic growth.
"It helps by reducing the inequalities," Lagarde replied. "If young kids in all countries of the world, particularly the low income countries, can go to school, they will be better off."
"If women, instead of walking miles to get water as is the case in so many countries, can actually access a road, a highway, and go and fetch water without having to spend all those hours," she continued. "If kids are born in a hospital where there is appropriate care then clearly they’re going to be better off for the rest of their life."
"So by doing that you improve the prosperity of people, not today, not tomorrow, but maybe in five, 10 years’ time because that’s critically important for the future," she concluded.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
See Also:
- Trump is threatening to disrupt the $5 trillion currency market by inserting clauses into trade deals. Here’s how that could change how the entire global economy functions.
- The SEC just dinged another Wall Street firm in a probe that’s claimed more than $400 million in fines from the likes of JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank
- Beware a ‘Trump recession’: JPMorgan unloads on the president’s role in erasing a full year of market progress — and lays out a scenario that could save the day
SEE ALSO: Trump’s China tariffs could slam American shoppers with an extra $800 in costs a year
Source: Business Insider – tmohamed@businessinsider.com (Theron Mohamed)