A global
trade war is in the offing! On April 3, America announced a list of 1,300
Chinese products—worth around $46 bn constituting 9% of total exports of China to
the US in 2017— imposing 25% tariff on them. The next day, China released its
own list of about 106 American products including its key exports such as
soybeans, cars and aircraft—worth around $50 bn amounting to 38% total US
exports in 2017—for subjecting them to punitive tariffs.
Now, the
obvious question is: will this game of tit-for-tat lead to a trade war? The
answer is perhaps, ‘No’, for these are only lists and are, for the being, no
more than mere threats. Which is why it is hoped that they will come to the negotiating
table and back down, at least that is what the global stock and currency markets,
which are relatively calm to the ongoing rhetoric, seem to believe.
To
appreciate the possibility of this outcome, let us first take a look at the
real underlying reason for the US threat of tariffs. When the US first imposed
tariffs on the imports of steel and aluminium, ostensibly in the interest of
national security, the real target appears to be China. For, tariffs being
levied under the pretext of national security, US can exempt imports from NATO
countries as also Japan and Korea from the said tariff, of course, after
bargaining for a reduction in tariffs on US products that exceed US tariffs.
And that leaves China exposed to the tariffs, but America avoiding the risk of
a broader trade war, for certain, with its allies. Though the US authorities didn’t say in so
many words, that is the scenario to which the whole game plan of introducing
tariffs with a phase-in period subtly points.
That
said, we must next examine why target China? The answer is: It has been
promising for years to reduce its excess steel capacity and thereby cut down
the export of steel to the US at subsidized price. But it did little in this
direction, perhaps, under its domestic compulsions. So, introduction of new
tariffs is expected to offer a counter to the administration to address its
domestic pressure and thereby enable China to speed up the process of reducing
its surplus production of subsidized steel. A fond hope!
Secondly,
US has a justified reason to clamp tariffs: China is often found stealing
technology developed by the US firms. It is complained that China, by deploying
the excellent cyber skills of its People’s Liberation Army, is hacking US
companies’ sites and stealing technology. China, of course, denied this all
along until the erstwhile Obama administration presented clear evidence about
the said practices to President Xi Jinping in 2013. This appeared to have given
some relief, for President Xi said to have agreed to stop such cyber
theft.
And there
is, of course, circumstantial evidence of this indeed happening: China has now
invented a new method of getting the latest technology of US companies
transferred to it: today it insists that US firms wanting to do business in
China have to transfer their technology to their local business partners as a
pre-condition for entering their market. And no US Company could ignore a
rising market such as China with a population of around 1.3 billion people and
an economy which is now as large as that of the US. The result is: voluntary
transfer of technology by US companies! Over it, China is also often found to
delay the entry of the products of these firms into its market so as to afford
time for the local companies to make use of the so transferred technology to
boost their own market share, a double whammy for US companies! This, Americans
consider as unfair, while China, perhaps, looks at it as the only way to grow
economically. And, there are no known formal means to get this behaviour of
China corrected quickly. “Hence, the present tariffs”, aver one section of
analysts. But one cannot be certain if
such unilateral trade sanctions will ever deliver the desired!
That
said, we must also take into consideration the credibility of the tariff
impositions by the US. Interestingly, economists like Lawrence Summers commented
that Trump’s trade offensive lacks credibility to deliver results, for: one,
the real reason behind the current trade imbalances with China is not America
keeping its market open on the most favorable nation terms to Chinese exports,
but the rise of emerging economies as major participants in the global economy;
two, China’s global surpluses are today far below the targets for which the US
has earlier negotiated, and in any case trade bluster is not the right way to
create pressure on China to behave; three, Trump’s taking up the cause of
American companies—protecting them from transfer of their technology to Chinese
firms—that moved their production to China for producing goods for the Chinese
market sounds ironical, for in a different context US administration is
condemning outsourcing; and four, American disregard for the WTO and the global
system has indeed turned away many countries including its own allies from it,
and therefore, China may not find it difficult to export to other countries
while American producers, particularly, mid-west farmers have to face the brunt
of China’s punitive tariffs.
Another
section of analysts believe that had Trump, overcoming his aversion to
multilateralism, joining hands with EU and Japan been able to pursue China with
a series of joint action before the WTO, he would have acquired not only
credibility but also wielded pressure on China to behave. That would have also
given him handle to punish China without getting punished equally as of now. It
is only the Midwest farmers growing Soyabean, incidentally his major vote base,
who know where the proposed tariffs by the US and the China’s reaction to it
pinch.
Summing
up the whole episode, some critics, citing one of Trump’s tweets—“When you’re
already $500 bn down, you can’t lose”—opine that Trump’s approach to trade
reflects less of underlying economics but more of a gambling. Some even wonder
if Trump knows the cost of failure in the gamble at all!
Nevertheless,
they do see a method in the madness. So,
it is hoped that China, while retaliating Trump’s move with limited
countermeasures might attempt to defuse America’s legitimate complaints, for
that strategy alone keep its longterm interests intact. And driven by the same
philosophy, China may reduce the bilateral surplus by importing liquefied
natural gas from the US. In short, there would be a give and take between the
two, for that is where their long-term interest lies. And a dialogue in this
direction is already on.
So, let
us keep our fingers crossed for the being hoping for the smooth sail of the
world trade!
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