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Bush administration stokes trade tensions with China
By John Chan
7 February 2007
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The Bush administration took a drastic step last Friday toward
provoking an open trade conflict with China by referring its disputes
with Beijing to the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
The US trade representative Susan Schwab filed a formal complaint
with the WTO, accusing Beijing of using its basic tax laws
and other tools to encourage exports and to discriminate against
imports of a variety of American manufactured goods. She
claimed that Chinese subsidies had denied an opportunity
[for US firms] to compete fairly in the United States and in third
country markets.
This is the third time that the US has taken a case to the
WTO since China joined the body in December 2001. However, unlike
previous cases that targetted specific categories of Chinese goods,
the latest US action alleges illegal subsidies across
a wide spectrum of Chinese products, from steel and paper to information
technology. Some 55 percent of Chinese exports to the US could
be affected.
Beijing has 60 days to reach a negotiated settlement with Washington
or the WTO will set up a panel to arbitrate the dispute. If it
loses, China would have to remove the subsidies or face US trade
penalties. The process of WTO consultation can, however, be lengthy.
The US, EU and Canada filed a joint compliant last March against
Chinas policy of restricting the import of foreign-made
car parts, but a ruling has not been made.
In the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, Beijing
introduced a series of tax rebates to protect Chinese exporters
from the impact of rapidly depreciating Asian currencies. These
measures, along with Chinas fixed exchange rate with the
US dollar, established in 1994, played a significant role in making
China the worlds major export processing centre.
The US trade deficit with China ballooned to a new record of
$230 billion last year. In the face of growing pressure from Washington
over this expanding deficit, Beijing has already been forced to
cut some of its tax rebates.
Schwabs announcement came in response to intensifying
demands from the new US Democratic Congressional leadershipbacked
by the trade union bureaucracy and sections of businessfor
a more confrontational approach to China on trade issues.
In a hearing before the Senate Banking Committee two days earlier,
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson came under fire over his policy
of conducting a strategic economic dialogue with Beijing
as the means of encouraging it to adopt a more flexible exchange
rate regime. The new committee chairman, Democratic Senator Christopher
Dodd, told Paulson that protectionist sentiment at home was livid
over Chinas failure to allow its currency to appreciate
against the US dollar. The US Treasury is under so much criticism
over the issue that Tim Adams, the official in charge of the departments
Chinese affairs, resigned on February 2.
Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have accused Beijing
of deliberately keeping the yuan undervalued by as much as 40
percent in order to give Chinese goods a competitive advantage.
Congress has threatened punitive protectionist legislation over
Beijings alleged currency manipulation.
Leading Democrats responded to the US administrations
latest action against China by pushing for further measures. Democratic
chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Max Baucus, declared:
The US government needs to stand up for American workers
and companies when our trading partners are bending, or breaking,
the rules. Sander Levin, the Democratic head of the Ways
and Means trade panel in the House of Representatives, commented:
This case represents a step in the right direction, but
it must be part of a much more aggressive program to take action
against violation of WTO obligations.
Sections of American business that face strong competition
from China and internationally have also demanded tougher steps.
Nancy Gravatt, spokeswoman for the Washington-based American Iron
and Steel Institute, declared: This filing [at the WTO],
while significant, only touches the tip of the iceberg of the
full range of subsidies being provided to steel and other manufacturing
industries in China.
The Bush administration is walking a fine line. While the White
House wants to defuse the discontent over rising trade deficits,
it cannot afford to disrupt the operations of major American corporations
that have large investments in China. Moreover, if the Chinese
Peoples Bank is forced to sell off US bonds and other dollar-based
assets to depress the value of the yuan, other Asian central banks
may follow suit, leading to a collapse of the US dollar and a
financial crisis in the US.
In a speech to Illinois-based bulldozer maker Caterpillar on
January 30, Bush declared: I understand trade with China
is considered controversial... But I want to tell you something,
if youre a Caterpillar worker, or a Caterpillar shareholder,
what that has meant. Warning against protectionist measures,
he noted that Caterpillar had strong sales in China, which had
in turn created 5,000 jobs in the US.
It is not so much US corporations like Caterpillar that are
under pressure from Chinese competition. The company is a transnational
giant that operates in 23 of the worlds 24 time zones and
has seven large production facilities in China itself. Small and
medium American manufacturing firms, which employ millions of
workers, are the hardest hit by the impact of cheap Chinese goods.
Morgan Stanley chief economist Stephen Roach commented on the
Globalist website on January 30 that trade sanctions on
China would not resolve US economic problems. He noted firstly
that the US current account deficit stood at 6.8 percent of GDP
in the third quarter of the 2006, nearly double the 3.5 percent
level of 1986. He also pointed out that the bilateral imbalance
of -1.9 percent of GDP with China was more than 50 percent above
the peak reached with Japan in the late 1980s.
Unlike the aggressive expansion of Japanese banks and corporations
in 1980s, Roach explained, Chinas competition
today involves American-based transnational corporations using
low-cost Chinese labour to increase profitability at the expense
of jobs and wages in the US. Protectionism would do little to
stop this process. Higher tariffs on Chinese exports would simply
force US companies to turn to other cheap labour countries.
Roach pointed out that only 20 percent of Chinese exports to
the US were value-added in China, which is more of an assembler
than a manufacturer. In other words, Chinese
goods are produced from components sourced from a network of other
countries, to which trade measures against China would not apply.
Services such as IT were also being outsourced from the US to
China and India to take advantage of their cheap skilled labour.
Roach noted that these processes have produced an extraordinary
disparity between the capital and labour shares of US national
incomes. The share of profit is now at a 50-year high of
12.4 percent, whereas labours share is just 56.3 percentback
to the levels of the late 1960s. Today, US companies, as
seen through the lens of corporate profitability, are thriving
as never before while the US workforce is increasingly isolated
in its competitive squeeze, he wrote.
The American ruling elite has no progressive solution to the
economic problems produced by its rising trade deficit with China.
The political dilemmas in Washington are being produced by the
steady long-term decline of American capitalism. On the one hand,
the US heavily relies on China to offset its deteriorating economic
position, while, on the other hand, it fears that Chinas
continuing expansion is creating a major new rival.
Beijing has repeatedly urged Washington to lift restrictions
on high-tech exports to China as a means of reducing the huge
US trade deficit. But the Bush administration has turned down
all such appeals, fearing that China will become a competitor
in such items and that imported US technologies will bolster the
military capacity of its strategic competitor.
The Chinese government has made a low-key response to the US
complaint to the WTO, declaring only that it was a pity
that Washington had taken such action. Beijing is desperately
seeking to avoid any trade conflict that would cut into economic
growth, resulting in huge layoffs and broad social unrest. For
the same reason, however, the Chinese leadership is very reluctant
to abandon the industrial subsidies that have assisted its rapid
economic expansion.
See Also:
US-China strategic
economic dialogue underscores sharpening trade tensions
[20 December 2006]
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