First shots fired in US-China trade war

There has been rising concern in recent weeks that China’s burgeoning trade with the United States could lead to worsening bilateral economic relations and repercussions for global trade.
In the first two months
of this year, China’s bilateral trade surplus with the US hit an all-time high of US$39.7 billion, with the March surplus projected to double to around US$20 billion.
The upsurge in Chinese exports has been of great concern to the US. The overall trade surplus last year hit the unprecedented level of US$232.5 billion, one third of America’s total trade deficit.
The US government has reacted to the latest news by imposing countervailing duties of 10.9% and 20.4% on imported coated paper from China, in what many have interpret as the first shots in the start of a trade war.
Until now, it has refrained from using countervailing duties against China, having mainly resorted to anti-dumping actions. Its latest action appears to treat China like a free market economy rather than one where many industries could be subsidised by the state.
For some considerable time, the US government has been pressuring China to revalue the yuan, arguing that an artificially low currency is an impediment to trade and that it provides Chinese manufacturers with an unfair advantage.
A lowly valued currency has been used in the past, notably by Japan, to promote export-led growth but that policy came to an end in the mid to late-1980s under severe US pressure saw the yen revalued to its current levels.
The mood in the US Congress is also in favour of various protectionist measures that it hoped would bring the China trade into balance.
In his statement on the tariffs on coated or glossy paper imports, US commerce secretary Carlos Gutierrez said: “We want fair trade and we will use every tool at our disposal to guarantee that our companies have a level playing field.”
He said the US now had the ability to “quantify” subsidies by non-market economies.
China has been unhappy with the US decision and has warned of possible retaliation, and one government official claimed the trade surplus for January and February was unlikely to be indicative of the trend in the first quarter of this year or the year as a whole.
Most analysts felt a high trade surplus could be anticipated once again for March, possibly in the vicinity of US$20 million, providing further impetus for US calls for action against the Chinese.
Ironically, leading US management consultants McKinsey had warned early last year that American and European producers of coated papers, who were eyeing the burgeoning Chinese market, were likely to be in a for rude shock.
“Fine paper capacity is exploding throughout Asia, particularly in China,” wrote Peter Burg and Per-Ove Nordström, in an article in March last year titled “The China factor in fine paper”.
Predicting an overcapacity in world demand for fine paper, they noted that China’s production capacity for this product was expected to double to around four million tonnes a year by 2008 and that this could transform the country from an importer into a net exporter.
The article predicted the Chinese plants will be competitive with imports from the US and Europe and come in around the middle of the Asian cost curve.
The McKinsey article raises questions about the legitimacy of the American trade actions which only affects a miniscule portion of bilateral trade anyway.
If the Americans decide to extend the countervailing duties or tariffs to other Chinese products such as textiles, plastics and steel, there will be the ever-present danger of a strong reaction from China.
There is a certain level of irony in the entire situation.
China’s economy has continued to grow at double digit rates despite various measures by the authorities to slow it down.
This growth is largely responsible for lifting poverty for millions of Chinese.
In the United States, on the other hand, while it is feeling the brunt of China’s increasing role as the world’s major power in terms of manufacturing activity and exports, its economy too has been very buoyant.
Helped partly by the Chinese imports, inflation has remained relatively low and employment remains very strong despite some 1.5 million manufacturing jobs having been shed between 1989 and 2003.
In fact, financial inflows into the US last year amounted to US$719 billion, largely made up of purchase of US Treasury bonds by Asian buyers, while foreign direct investment into the US totalled US$183.6 billion.
While the US would like to blunt the Chinese export onslaught into its markets in favour of more even trade, there is no guarantee that a stronger yuan is going to bring about this result in the short to medium term.
There is every likelihood, in fact, that tough actions on the part of the US could be counter-productive especially at a time when the US economy shows some signs of being impacted by inflationary pressures and a possible slowdown.

 

       

 

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