By: Aditi
Published on: Apr 18, 2025
The resurgence of protectionist US trade policies under the Donald Trump administration has sent shockwaves through global markets. In April 2025, the announcement of sweeping tariffs marked the most significant peacetime trade disruption in over a century, raising urgent questions about the stability of sovereign credit ratings worldwide. Scope Ratings, a leading credit risk assessor, has identified three critical scenarios—tariff-light, trade war, and economic crisis—that could redefine fiscal resilience, inflation dynamics, and debt sustainability for nations across the globe.
This analysis unpacks these scenarios, evaluates their implications for sovereign creditworthiness, and highlights the countries most vulnerable to cascading risks.
The United States (rated AA with a Negative Outlook by Scope Ratings) sits at the epicenter of this policy shift. Proposed tariffs target key trading partners, threatening to disrupt supply chains, inflate costs, and destabilize currencies. Even if reversed, the erosion of trust in free trade agreements and alliances suggests lasting economic damage.
For sovereigns, the stakes are high:
Scope Ratings emphasizes that sovereign credit impacts will hinge on three factors:
In this baseline scenario, the US implements moderate tariffs focused on specific sectors (e.g., clean energy, EVs, steel), avoiding broad-based escalation. Trading partners like the EU and China respond with calibrated countermeasures while accelerating regional trade pacts.
Key Outcomes:
Exporters with US exposure (Mexico, Canada) face short-term disruptions but adapt via nearshoring.
Diversified economies (Germany, South Korea) leverage alternative markets in Asia and Africa.
Credit Implications:
A 10–15% across-the-board tariff regime triggers a domino effect. China imposes export restrictions on rare earth minerals; the EU slaps tariffs on US tech and agriculture. Global trade volume drops 7–10%, reminiscent of the 1930s Smoot-Hawley fallout.
Key Outcomes:
Credit Implications:
Vulnerable Sovereigns:
The worst-case scenario sees tariffs morph into capital controls and a crisis of confidence in the dollar. The EU and China bypass the dollar in energy trades, while the Fed hikes rates to 7% to curb inflation, sparking a liquidity crunch.
Key Outcomes:
Credit Implications:
High Trade Openness
Ireland: Trade-to-GDP of 220% exposes it to EU-US tensions.
Vietnam: Electronics exports (30% of GDP) hinge on US-China détente.
Debt Sensitivity
Italy: Rising yields could push debt servicing costs above 5% of GDP.
Ghana: Already in default; external debt > 50% of GDP.
Commodity Dependence
Nigeria: Oil exports (80% of revenue) suffer from demand shocks.
Chile: Copper price slump strains BBB+ rating.
Currency Risks
Turkey: Lira volatility exacerbates $200bn corporate debt.
Argentina: Milei’s reforms falter amid peso collapse.
A protracted trade war could erode the dollar’s 59% share in global reserves. China and the EU may:
Implications for the US:
Scope Ratings underscores the need for agile fiscal and monetary policies:
The trajectory of US trade policy remains the linchpin for sovereign credit stability. While a tariff-light scenario offers manageable risks, a full-blown trade war or economic crisis could unravel decades of globalization. Investors and policymakers must prioritize:
Alvise Lennkh-Yunus is Head of Sovereign and Public Sector Ratings at Scope Ratings. This analysis incorporates contributions from Scope’s Eiko Sievert, Thomas Gillet, and Brian Marly.
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