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US-China strategic economic dialogue underscores
sharpening trade tensions
By John Chan
20 December 2006
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An unprecedented US delegation sent to Beijing for the first
session of a proposed twice-yearly strategic economic dialogue
on December 14-15 highlights the sharpening trade tensions between
the US and China.
Headed by US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the high-powered
team included virtually every senior US economic official: Federal
Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke, US trade representative Susan
Schwab and the secretaries of commerce, labour, energy, health
and human services as well as the head of Environmental Protection
Agency. A day before the US party arrived, former US President
George Bush senior met Chinese President Hu Jintao.
As widely expected, nothing concrete came out of the dialogue.
For all of the rhetoric calling for Chinese leaders to speed up
market reform, the Bush administration was walking
a fine line. While responding to protectionist demands from Congress,
the White House is deeply concerned about the economic impact
on the US and world economy of trade sanctions against China.
At the heart of the current crisis is Chinas reluctance
to allow a rapid revaluation of its currency, the yuan. Since
ending the previous fixed exchange rate regime in July 2005, the
yuan has revalued only 5.7 percentfar less than Congressional
demands for a rise against the US dollar of 15-40 percent.
Sections of Congress, with the Democrats in the forefront,
accuse China of manipulating its currency to damage
the US economy. As many as 27 proposed bills threaten tariffs
against Chinese exports to the US. As economists had predicted,
the US trade deficit with China will reach a record $240 billion
this year, up from $202 billion in 2005.
Paulsons proposal in September for a US-China dialogue
sought to extract concessions from Beijing and preempt drastic
action in the Congress, particularly in the lead up to mid-term
Congressional elections in November. Once the Democrats regained
a Congressional majority, a more antagonistic approach dominated
Washingtons debate on China.
New Democratic majority leader Nancy Pelosi strongly opposed
Chinas admission into the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
in 2001. Commenting prior to the US-China dialogue, she declared:
Many of us in the Congress will be watching closely.
Christopher Dodd, the incoming chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, demanded strong action. Ive listened to
previous secretaries [of the treasury] talk about jawboning on
this issue and being patient, things are moving in the right
direction. But its pretty difficult to explain to
the American people day after day that a major competitor of ours,
now a member of the WTO, is still fixing its own rates at a great
disadvantage to us.
Just days before the US-China talks, a report by the US trade
representative to Congress on Chinas entry into the WTO
accused Beijing of failing to meet WTO requirements, including
opening up sections of the Chinese economy and cracking down on
widespread copyright breaches.
If the bilateral dialogue failed, the report threatened, the
administration will not hesitate to employ the full range of enforcement
tools available as a result of Chinas accession to the WTO,
whether it be the dispute settlement procedures at the WTO or
the strict enforcement of US trade laws to ensure that US interests
are not harmed by unfair trade practices.
Paulson made no secret of Washingtons protectionist threats,
saying: I think the message in this report is consistent
with our messages previously. He told reporters the world
would run out of patience if Beijings economic
reforms, including a rapid revaluation of the yuan, moved too
slowly.
When meeting with Chinese officials, however, Paulson significantly
toned down his rhetoric. As you know, there is resistance
in both our countries to greater integration into the global economy,
and there is also skepticism that this dialogue will accomplish
anything of substance, he declared.
More dramatic was Bernankes speech to the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences. The Federal Reserve chairman omitted an accusation
that Beijings currency policy was an effective subsidy
on exports, and grounds for charging China with violating WTO
principles. Instead he used a less inflammatory term, describing
the yuan regime as a distortion to global trade. Bernankes
spokeswoman insisted he had not been under any pressure to modify
his speech, even though the original version, with the term effective
subsidy, was posted on the Feds website.
The Chinese government rejected US criticisms. Vice Premier
Wu Yi warned: Some American friends not only have limited
knowledge of, but harbour misunderstandings about, the reality
of China. She pointed out that after the extremely
barbaric economic depredation of the imperialist powers
in nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, China was still a
developing country with a per capita income of just $1,700. Wu
reiterated Beijings policy of pro-market reform and
opening up and promised greater protection of intellectual
property rights and the rule of law.
The Bush administration is not interested in being lectured
on the reality of China, however. With rising trade and budget
deficits, the White House wants immediate action to make Chinas
currency trading more flexible and further deregulation of the
state-run financial sector. At the same time, it needs to ensure
that Congress will not disrupt the huge inflows of Chinese funds
and cheap goods that are vital for the US economy.
Criticisms by Democrats and American trade union bureaucrats
of Chinas unfair trade practices reflect the
deteriorating conditions in less competitive sections of US industry.
Unable to match rivals that have shifted or outsourced production
to China and other low-wage countries, these layers have to massively
cut wages and conditions to stave off collapse. Protectionist
measures will do nothing to stop the assault on the living standards
of American workers, but are designed to divert attention from
the real root of the rising social inequality and povertythe
profit systemand blame workers in China who are often exploited
by the same US corporations.
The most powerful sections of the US financial elite oppose
trade sanctions against China. Former President Bush senior told
an audience of Chinese university students: My worry is
that some of the leaders in the new Congress are anti-free trade;
they are more for protectionism. The concern of the large
US corporations is that protectionist measures will undermine
their ability to invest and reap huge profits in China.
In a recent comment, the Wall Street Journal defended
Chinas economic policies as being more open than those of
Japan and India. When China won the WTOs seal of approval
in late 2001, it was a signal to the world that Beijing wasnt
going to turn its back on capitalism. That sent a flood of foreign
investment sweeping into China, surging from roughly $40 billion
annually in the years before 2002 to more than $70 billion last
year.
According to the US Commerce Department, China overtook Mexico
this year as the second biggest trading partner of the US after
Canada. US-China trade has reached $328 billion10 times
the level in 1992. In addition, Chinas central bank is helping
to finance the huge US trade and current account deficits and
has accumulated $700 billion in US government bonds and other
dollar-denominated assets. China now has foreign currency reserves
of $1 trillionthe largest in the world. As the US dollar
has weakened, the inflow of Chinese and Asian capital has been
crucial in keeping the debt-stricken US economy afloat.
A major fear in Washington is that US tariffs against China
will destabilise financial relations. A Chinese Peoples
Bank report, released on December 7, pointed to the dangers of
a loss of international confidence in the US dollar. If
external capital stops flowing into the United States, a significant
drop in the US dollar may occur with consumption and investment
shrinking, interest rising and financial markets experiencing
turbulenceendangering global financial and economic stability,
the report warned.
The Chinese central bank is trying to diversify its foreign
currency reserve portfolios into euros, gold and other currencies
to reduce the risk of relying on the greenback. Beijing is trying
to reduce its dollar assets without creating panic and a rush
out of the US market that would trigger financial turmoil. However,
all major investors are doing the same, which is only increasing
volatility in the financial and money markets.
As on other occasions, US and Chinese officials in the Beijing
dialogue pointed to the need for China to encourage consumption-led
economic growth. A more expensive yuan is widely regarded as a
way of increasing the buying power of Chinese consumers and thus
increasing imports from the US. The diversification of Chinas
financial system beyond the present state-run banks, the argument
goes, could transform Chinas high rate of saving into domestic
spending.
However, this perspective is riddled with contradictions. While
a small layer of the urban middle class has propelled a growth
in consumption, the vast majority of the Chinese populationthe
working class and rural poorare struggling to make ends
meet. The impact of a higher yuan on exports could cost millions
of jobs, leading to a decrease in consumption by Chinese workers.
To encourage domestic spending, Beijing would also have to
significantly increase real wages and expand the provision of
healthcare, education and pensions. But such measures would further
undermine Chinas main economic advantage as a source of
cheap labourleading to further job losses.
Chinas textile industry, which alone supports directly
and indirectly 100 million people, is particularly vulnerable.
It is already operating on tight profit margins of 3-5 percent.
The government has forecast that 15 million urban job seekers
will not find a job next year. Beijing fears that any rise in
job losses would lead to an eruption of social and political unrest.
A Financial Times editorial on December 18 warned Beijing
must nevertheless make changes. Either it responds constructively
to Mr. Paulsons initiative with actions that strengthen
both its own economy and his ability to restrain more bellicose
political forces at home; or it runs the risk that those [US protectionist]
forces will prevail, with incalculable consequences for both countries
interests. Given the strength of anti-Chinese feeling in the US,
not much time is left to make that choice.
See Also:
Beijing prepares the army to repress
domestic unrest
[5 December 2006]
Wal-Mart opens its doors to
state-run unions in China
[4 November 2006]
China's "overheating"
threatens economic instability
[2 August 2006]
US-China trade tensions escalate
[10 April 2006]
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