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德意志银行警告:特朗普以关税威胁格陵兰,暴露美国的致命软肋

Eleanor Pringle
2026-01-21

经济学家警告称,在围绕格陵兰岛的谈判中,美国总统特朗普可能操之过急。

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美国总统唐纳德·特朗普。图片来源:Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post - Getty Images

经济学家警告称,在围绕格陵兰岛的谈判中,美国总统特朗普可能操之过急。此前,白宫威胁称,若欧盟国家不支持美国购买该领土的要求,将对其征收新的关税。

上周末,特朗普在其自有社交平台Truth Social上发帖称:“自2026年2月1日起,……丹麦、挪威、瑞典、法国、德国、英国、荷兰和芬兰向美出口的所有商品,将被征收10%的关税。

“自2026年6月1日起,加征关税的税率将提高至25%,在相关方就美国全面、彻底购买格陵兰岛达成协议之前,将持续执行该关税。”

特朗普认为,出于国家安全考虑,美国有必要购买这块并不对外出售的领土。他辩称,格陵兰岛虽是丹麦的自治领地,但丹麦没有能力保卫这片土地。

特朗普购买他国主权管辖领土的要求,在西方世界引发强烈反感。尽管美国仍是全球最大的经济体,但在经历了一年围绕关税和军费开支的争端后,其盟友的耐心正日渐耗尽。

经济学家如今警告称,特朗普在周末的强势施压或许已经越界,而特朗普的软肋,可能正是美国毫无节制的财政支出习惯。

德意志银行(Deutsche Bank)的吉姆·里德指出,去年4月的“解放日”关税在推出一周后便被迫撤回,原因是美国国债收益率出现了一次“令人恐慌”的波动,投资者纷纷抛售美国债务、转向避险资产。

里德在今晨致客户的报告中写道:“金融市场可能在这一局势的最终走向中发挥关键作用。美国的致命软肋是其巨额的双重赤字。因此,尽管美国在很多方面看似掌握了经济筹码,但在一个将因周末事件而陷入剧烈震荡的世界里,美国并没有掌控所有资金筹码。”

长期以来,投资者、分析师以及各国领导人都在猜测,那些背负巨额赤字的国家,究竟何时或者是否会爆发债务危机。尽管日本、英国和法国等国也远未实现财政收支平衡,但美国高达38万亿美元的赤字仍然远超其他国家。相当一部分债务由公众持有(其中包括美联储——而特朗普总统也正因此陷入争议),但外国政府和海外投资者也持有巨额美债。

荷兰国际集团(ING)指出,欧洲领导人或许要提醒白宫注意美国高达8万亿美元的外债敞口。荷兰国际集团全球宏观主管卡斯滕·布热斯基与荷兰首席经济学家伯特·科利恩在报告中写道,作为美国最大的债权方,欧洲“既彰显了美欧之间深度的相互依存关系,也表明至少在理论层面,欧洲对美国同样拥有一定的筹码。”两人还补充道:“但在现实中,欧洲是否真的会掀起一轮‘抛售美国’的行动,则是另一回事。欧盟几乎无法强迫欧洲私营部门投资者出售美元资产;它所能做的,最多只是尝试激励资金转向欧元资产。”

替代手段:反胁迫工具

欧盟手中还有一件尚未动用的武器。法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙表示,当下正是动用欧盟反胁迫工具(Anti-Coercion Instrument,ACI)的时机。该工具是一整套反制措施,用于应对任何不当干预欧盟或其成员国政策选择的外国势力,其手段包括:限制美国企业进入欧洲市场、禁止其参与政府项目招标、限制贸易以及削减外国投资等。

欧盟还可能对约1,000亿美元的美国进口商品加征新关税。

高盛(Goldman Sachs)认为,这很可能是欧洲领导人当前正在权衡的应对措施之一。分析师斯文·亚里·施滕和乔瓦尼·皮尔多梅尼科在本周末的报告中写道,这项立法正是为应对此类情形而设计的——尽管当初或许并未预料到会用于对付美国这样的重量级盟友。

两人写道:“启动该工具并不意味着立即实施(实施仍需若干步骤),但它会释放欧盟可能采取行动的信号,并为谈判争取时间。ACI所涵盖的政策工具远不止关税,还可能包括投资限制、对美国资产和服务征税等措施。”在服务贸易方面,欧盟对美国保持顺差,这意味着相较于来自大西洋彼岸的对等行动,欧盟一旦出手,将在这一领域造成更大的冲击。(财富中文网)

译者:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

经济学家警告称,在围绕格陵兰岛的谈判中,美国总统特朗普可能操之过急。此前,白宫威胁称,若欧盟国家不支持美国购买该领土的要求,将对其征收新的关税。

上周末,特朗普在其自有社交平台Truth Social上发帖称:“自2026年2月1日起,……丹麦、挪威、瑞典、法国、德国、英国、荷兰和芬兰向美出口的所有商品,将被征收10%的关税。

“自2026年6月1日起,加征关税的税率将提高至25%,在相关方就美国全面、彻底购买格陵兰岛达成协议之前,将持续执行该关税。”

特朗普认为,出于国家安全考虑,美国有必要购买这块并不对外出售的领土。他辩称,格陵兰岛虽是丹麦的自治领地,但丹麦没有能力保卫这片土地。

特朗普购买他国主权管辖领土的要求,在西方世界引发强烈反感。尽管美国仍是全球最大的经济体,但在经历了一年围绕关税和军费开支的争端后,其盟友的耐心正日渐耗尽。

经济学家如今警告称,特朗普在周末的强势施压或许已经越界,而特朗普的软肋,可能正是美国毫无节制的财政支出习惯。

德意志银行(Deutsche Bank)的吉姆·里德指出,去年4月的“解放日”关税在推出一周后便被迫撤回,原因是美国国债收益率出现了一次“令人恐慌”的波动,投资者纷纷抛售美国债务、转向避险资产。

里德在今晨致客户的报告中写道:“金融市场可能在这一局势的最终走向中发挥关键作用。美国的致命软肋是其巨额的双重赤字。因此,尽管美国在很多方面看似掌握了经济筹码,但在一个将因周末事件而陷入剧烈震荡的世界里,美国并没有掌控所有资金筹码。”

长期以来,投资者、分析师以及各国领导人都在猜测,那些背负巨额赤字的国家,究竟何时或者是否会爆发债务危机。尽管日本、英国和法国等国也远未实现财政收支平衡,但美国高达38万亿美元的赤字仍然远超其他国家。相当一部分债务由公众持有(其中包括美联储——而特朗普总统也正因此陷入争议),但外国政府和海外投资者也持有巨额美债。

荷兰国际集团(ING)指出,欧洲领导人或许要提醒白宫注意美国高达8万亿美元的外债敞口。荷兰国际集团全球宏观主管卡斯滕·布热斯基与荷兰首席经济学家伯特·科利恩在报告中写道,作为美国最大的债权方,欧洲“既彰显了美欧之间深度的相互依存关系,也表明至少在理论层面,欧洲对美国同样拥有一定的筹码。”两人还补充道:“但在现实中,欧洲是否真的会掀起一轮‘抛售美国’的行动,则是另一回事。欧盟几乎无法强迫欧洲私营部门投资者出售美元资产;它所能做的,最多只是尝试激励资金转向欧元资产。”

替代手段:反胁迫工具

欧盟手中还有一件尚未动用的武器。法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙表示,当下正是动用欧盟反胁迫工具(Anti-Coercion Instrument,ACI)的时机。该工具是一整套反制措施,用于应对任何不当干预欧盟或其成员国政策选择的外国势力,其手段包括:限制美国企业进入欧洲市场、禁止其参与政府项目招标、限制贸易以及削减外国投资等。

欧盟还可能对约1,000亿美元的美国进口商品加征新关税。

高盛(Goldman Sachs)认为,这很可能是欧洲领导人当前正在权衡的应对措施之一。分析师斯文·亚里·施滕和乔瓦尼·皮尔多梅尼科在本周末的报告中写道,这项立法正是为应对此类情形而设计的——尽管当初或许并未预料到会用于对付美国这样的重量级盟友。

两人写道:“启动该工具并不意味着立即实施(实施仍需若干步骤),但它会释放欧盟可能采取行动的信号,并为谈判争取时间。ACI所涵盖的政策工具远不止关税,还可能包括投资限制、对美国资产和服务征税等措施。”在服务贸易方面,欧盟对美国保持顺差,这意味着相较于来自大西洋彼岸的对等行动,欧盟一旦出手,将在这一领域造成更大的冲击。(财富中文网)

译者:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

President Trump may be overplaying his hand in negotiations for Greenland, economists are warning, after the Oval Office threatened new tariffs on E.U. countries if they did not support America’s demand to purchase the territory.

Over the weekend, President Trump posted on Truth Social (a site he owns) that “starting on February 1st, 2026, … Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, and Finland, will be charged a 10% tariff on any and all goods sent to the United States of America.

“On June 1st, 2026, the tariff will be increased to 25%. This tariff will be due and payable until such time as a deal is reached for the complete and total purchase of Greenland.”

President Trump believes the U.S. needs to buy the territory (which is not for sale) for national security reasons, claiming China and Russia also want to control the region. He argues that Denmark, of which Greenland is a self-governing, autonomous part of the kingdom, does not have the ability to defend the land.

Trump’s request to purchase land under the jurisdiction of another nation has not gone down well with the Western world. While the U.S. may be the biggest economy on the planet, patience is wearing thin among its allies, after a year of barbed back-and-forths over tariffs and military spending.

This weekend’s power flex may be a stretch too far, economists are now warning, and Trump’s weakness may prove to be America’s voracious spending habits.

Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid highlighted that Liberation Day tariffs in April were stepped back a week later, after U.S. Treasury yields saw a “scary” session as investors retreated to safety, away from American borrowing.

“Financial markets may play a big part in how this situation resolves itself,” Reid wrote in a note to clients this morning. “The main Achilles Heel of the U.S. is the huge twin deficits. So while in many ways it feels like the U.S. holds the economic cards, it doesn’t hold all the funding cards in a world that will be very disturbed by the weekend’s events.”

Investors, analysts, and world leaders have long wondered when—or if—a debt crisis would occur in one of the nations burdened by a massive deficit. While the likes of Japan, the U.K., and France are by no means balancing their books, America’s $38 trillion deficit dwarfs its counterparts. While a great deal of that debt is held by the public (including the Fed, where President Trump is also in hot water), vast sums are also owned by foreign governments and overseas investors.

This exposure—to the tune of $8 trillion—ING pointed out, may be something European leaders decide to remind the White House of. Europe being America’s largest lender “illustrates the deep interdependence between the U.S. and Europe but also shows that, at least theoretically, Europe also has leverage on the U.S.,” wrote Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro, and Bert Colijn, chief economist for the Netherlands. The duo added: “Whether in practice, Europe would really engage in a ‘Sell America Inc’ season is a completely different question. There is very little the EU could do to force European private sector investors to sell USD assets; it could only try to incentivise investments in EUR assets.”

Alternative measures: An ACI

The EU also has a weapon in its arsenal that it has yet to deploy. French President Emmanuel Macron has suggested now is the time to use the E.U.’s Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI). The tool is a set of countermeasures against any foreign powers that unduly interfere in the policy choices of the E.U. or its member states, by restricting U.S. companies from accessing the European market, banning them from bidding for government work, restricting trade, and curtailing foreign investment.

The E.U. could also impose new tariffs on about $100 billion of its imports from the U.S.

This, Goldman Sachs believes, is likely to be one of the reactions European leaders are now weighing. Analysts Sven Jari Stehn and Giovanni Pierdomenico wrote this weekend that the legislation had been designed precisely for situations like this—though perhaps not with a strong ally like the U.S. in mind.

The duo wrote: “Starting the activation does not mean implementation (which requires several steps) but signals potential E.U. action and allows time for negotiation. The ACI could involve a range of policy tools broader than tariffs, such as investment restrictions, taxation of U.S. assets and services.” On services, the E.U. conveniently holds a surplus over the U.S., meaning it would inflict greater harm in this particular industry compared to similar action from across the Atlantic.

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