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Commentary TitleFinding the U.S. Interests and Role in China’s Economic Transition

By Yilun Zhang and Mengze Li

November 19, 2019

Source: UnSplash

In the News

China accuses US and Britain of hypocrisy over violence in Hong Kong
Jun Mai, Owen Churchill and Laura Zhou
South China Morning Post, November 12

On Tuesday, following “one of the bloodiest days” in the ongoing Hong Kong anti-government protests, China’s foreign ministry chastised Washington and London for not responding beyond ‘grave concern’ after a man was set on fire. In separate statements, Beijing said that ‘their lip service to justice has shown their double standards and ill intentions’ and directly likened the riots to acts of terrorism that need to be quenched as soon as possible. Concurrently, the US Congress is calling the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act to be brought to a vote in the upper chamber.

Aventura Technologies, which supplies US military, charged with selling illegal Chinese surveillance and security equipment
By Reuters
South China Morning Post, November 8

Aventura Technologies, a New York company specializing in security hardware and software, was federally charged will falsifying import documents and illegally selling at least $20.7 million worth of surveillance and security equipment sourced from China. The six employees who were arrested had been falsely telling customers that the equipment was made in the US instead of imported “in a scheme that ran from 2006 until this month.” Aventura’s largest customers are US government agencies and the military.

Huawei Founder Says Chinese Giant Doesn’t Need the U.S.
Dan Strumpf and Eva Dou
The Wall Street Journal, November 6

“Huawei Technologies Co. can survive without the U.S., Chief Executive Ren Zhengfei said, dismissing Washington’s campaign against it as ineffective.”

After Skipping the ASEAN Summit, Trump Invites Its Leaders to the U.S. for a Meeting
Associated Press
TIME, November 4

“After sending the U.S. national security adviser in his stead to the annual ASEAN Summit in Bangkok, President Trump invited Southeast Asian leaders to a ‘special summit’ in the U.S. early next year.”

U.S. navy secretary warns of ‘fragile’ supply chain
Financial Times, November 4

“Richard Spencer says America is at risk of relying on China and Russia for warship parts.”

The Launch of Multi-Stakeholder Blue Dot Network
The U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), November 4

“The U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) recently introduced the Blue Dot Network, a multi-stakeholder initiative which aims to bring together multiple stakeholders for the promotion of high-quality, trusted standards for global infrastructure development. The Network will evaluate and certify nominated infrastructure projects – especially those in the Indo-Pacific region – based on adherence to commonly accepted principles and standards.”

Washington presses Taiwan to curb TSMC chip sales to China’s Huawei
Kathrin Hille
Financial Times, November 3

“Washington seeks to plug loopholes in its blacklisting of Huawei.”

China Just Launched the World’s Largest 5G Network
Sherisse Pham
CNN, November 1

“China’s three largest telecom operators – China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom – all recently began offering 5G service in over 50 Chinese cities. China, which has over 850 million smartphone users, is poised to become the world’s largest provider of 5G. Analysts project that, despite political pressures from the U.S., Huawei will dominate the domestic 5G smartphone market.”

China on al-Baghdadi Death: U.S. ‘A Disruptive Force’ in Middle East
Frances Martel
BreitBart, October 29

“Shortly after President Trump announced that U.S. forces killed the leader of the Islamic State terrorist group, China’s government-run China Daily declared the U.S. ‘a disruptive force’ in the Middle East. The report was largely accusatory and negative despite ISIS itself being declared a national threat by Beijing over the past few years.”

China’s influence in W. Hemisphere threatens US interests: State Dept. official
Duncan Deaeth
Taiwan News, October 24

In a recent Senate hearing, U.S. State Department official Michael Kozak related China’s dangerous influence in the Central and South America to that of “19th-century imperial power.” Kozak highlighted the severity of the debt-traps and local bribery that will inevitably bring only problems to the host nations in the future.

U.S. Military Says Japan Must Inform Public of China Threat
Isabel Reynolds and Andreo Calonzo
Bloomberg, October 21

The U.S. military spoke out in Tokyo last Monday against its Japanese counterparts’ supposed lack of transparency with its people about the current national security threats and the need for offensive weapons. China’s “antagonistic” behavior was singled out as a primary security concern within the South China Sea region.

China asks WTO for $2.4 billion sanctions against U.S. in latest clash
Stephanie Nebehy
Reuters, October 21

“China is seeking $2.4 billion in retaliatory sanctions against the United States for failing to comply with a World Trade Organization ruling in a case that highlights White House complaints about the global trade body.”

Huawei admits that US sanctions are hurting
Kiran Stacey
Financial Times, October 20

“Chinese telecoms group struggles to replace Google apps on phones after export ban.”

Articles and Analysis

Engage China, or Confront It? What’s the Right Approach Now?
Liz Moyer
The New York Times, November 11

“Stephen K. Bannon, the former White House adviser, calls the United States’ relationship with China’s Communist Party an economic and information ‘war,’ while Eric Schmidt, a Google founder, says American interests are entangled with China, our biggest competitor in the race for global technological dominance. The next phase of the relationship between the two countries could set the tone for the rest of this century.”

Trump to Open New Consulate in Greenland as China, Russia Eye Arctic
Morten Soendergaard Larsen and Robbie Gramer
Foreign Policy, November 8

After President Trump’s “colonial-style bid” for the US to purchase Greenland earlier this year fell through, Washington decided to open a consulate in Greenland for the first time since 1953. This new consulate, seen as suspicious by some in Denmark and Greenland, is seen as a step towards marking the United States’ presence in a “fast-melting Arctic where rivals such as Russia and China are pushing for greater influence.”

Why China’s Development Model Won’t Work in Africa
Wade Shepard
Forbes, October 31

“In many ways, China’s interests are very much aligned with Africa’s when it comes to urbanization and infrastructure development. China’s multi-trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative is mainly focused on setting up a proper physical and digital infrastructure grid across Eurasia and Africa, and this means building the new rail lines, highways, power plants, airports, and IT systems that African countries desperately need and want. However, that doesn’t mean that Chinese development can simply be copied and pasted upon Africa.”

The Problem with a Phase One US-China Trade Deal
Stephan S Roach
CNA, October 29

“As both economies started to show visible signs of distress, there was a new optimism that reason would finally prevail, even in the face of an escalating weaponization of policy by the United States: Threatened capital controls, rumored delisting of Chinese companies whose shares trade on American stock exchanges, new visa restrictions, a sharp expansion of blacklisted Chinese firms on the dreaded Entity List, and talk of congressional passage of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019. ”https://www.wilsoncenter.org/event/video-vice-president-pence-delivers-inaugural-frederic-v-malek-public-service-leadership

Video: Vice President Pence Delivers Inaugural Frederic V. Malek Public Service Leadership Lecture

Wilson Center, October 24

“After over a year of silence, Vice President Pence spoke on the Trump administration’s China policy. He highlighted the ‘great power competition that is underway,’ Beijing’s inhumane suppression of ethnic and religious minorities, countless cases of intellectual property theft and the need for the international community to engage with Taiwan in defense of American values. He confirmed that the U.S. ‘stands with’ Hong Kong’s ‘peaceful protesting to protect [their] rights’ and concluded by warning China to ‘never underestimate the resilience of the freedom-loving people of America or the resolve of the President of the United States.’”

China’s Maritime Strategic Challenge
Douglas J. Feith and Admiral Gary Roughead
National Review, October 18

“America and its allies must cooperate to counter the military-commercial threat.”

Past Events

Admiral Philip S. Davidson: Addressing the Complexities, Contradictions, and Conundrums of the U.S.-China Relationship
Moderated by Stephen Orlins, National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, October 2 [14:00 minutes]

“Stephen Orlins (President, NCUSCR) spoke with Admiral Philip Davidson (Commander, USINDOPACOM) for 14 minutes on the topic of the U.S.-China relationship and Washington’s ‘Free and Open Indo-Pacific’ policy. Davidson started by describing the competition with China as the ‘long-term strategic threat to the United States and the rules-based international order,’ and that Beijing is specifically using economic and diplomatic pressures to force regional states to choose between China’s economy or the United States’ security. China has dramatically changed over the last four decades, and U.S. policy needs to change in response.”

“When commenting on a predecessor’s assertion that climate change ‘will cripple the security environment,’ Admiral Davidson confirmed that these environmental changes are undeniable and require high-level cooperation.”

“Admiral Davidson attests that the U.S. was in the Asia-Pacific region since World War II ‘not to conquer…but to liberate those countries’ from authoritarianism, and regional states regularly respond positively to the United States’ positive values. Specifically on Vietnam, Admiral Davidson said ‘there is energy’ in the country and that it is ‘coming to be a net contributor’ despite its current lack of freedoms.”

“Steven Orlins, speaking from eye-witness experience, defended that the peaceful and cooperative growth over the last four decades by China makes it inaccurate to characterize China as Admiral Davidson did: an authoritarian dictatorship that is facing failed reformation. To counter, Davidson directly referenced the Hong Kong democracy protests and human rights violations in Xinjiang; both current issues.”

“In response to high-level Chinese officials assurances towards bilateral peace and cooperation, Admiral Davidson stated that ‘we look forward to cooperating [with China] when we can’ and ‘would welcome China to that free and open international order.’ He concluded that the U.S. ‘would like to see them take less pernicious activity…and be less threatening with their [naval] military forces’ in the Indo-Pacific region.”

Summarized by Jessica Martin – November 13, 2019

 

From Click to Boom: The Political Economy of E-commerce in China
Event hosted by American Mandarin Society, November 19, 2019

ROK-U.S. Cooperation in an Era of U.S.-China Strategic Competition
Event hosted by Wilson Center,November 18, 2019

China’s Maritime Ambitions in the First Island Chain and Beyond
Event hosted by CSIS, November 18, 2019

Hong Kong and US-China relations: What Are the Options?
Event hosted by Wilson Center, November 15, 2019

Securing the Belt and Road
Event hosted by National Bureau of Asian Research, November 13, 2019

U.S. Space Strategy and Indo-Pacific Cooperation
Event hosted by Hudson Institute, November 13, 2019

Leadership…With Chinese Characteristics
Event hosted by National Bureau of Asian Research, November 12, 2019

The U.S., China, and Europe: A Conversation with Chairman Risch
Event hosted by CSIS, November 12, 2019

Contesting the Indo-Pacific: Military Technology and the Shifting Offense-Defense Balance
Event hosted by Stimson Center, November 7, 2019

China’s New Era in Techno-Governance
Event hosted by CSIS, November 6, 2019

Stealth War: How China Took Over While America’s Elite Slept
Event hosted by The Institute of World Politics, November 5, 2019

Partial Disengagement: A New U.S. Strategy for Economic Competition with China
Event hosted by National Bureau of Asian Research, November 5, 2019

Moving Target: China Policy Coordination for the United States and Japan
Event hosted by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, October 23, 2019

Upcoming Events

The 2019 Korea Global Forum
Event hosted by the US Institute of Peace, November 20, 2019

A Conversation with Ambassador Alice Wells on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
Event hosted by the Wilson Center, November 21, 2019

The Chinese Threat to Taiwanese Sovereignty
Event hosted by the Hudson Institute November 22, 2019

Global China: Assessing China’s role in East Asia
Event hosted by Brookings Institute, December 2, 2019

China’s Power: Up for Debate – 4th Annual ChinaPower Conference
Event hosted by CSIS, December 4, 2019

Commentary

Finding the U.S. Interests and Role in China’s Economic Transition

By Yilun Zhang and Mengze Li

After decades in the double digits, the year-on-year growth rate of China’s GDP fell to about 6.0 percent in the third quarter of 2019. This was the slowest growth rate since the first quarter of 1992. In a mid-September interview with Russian media, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said that it is ‘very difficult’ for China’s economy to continue growing at a rate of 6% or more.

Many believe that the gradual slowdown of China’s once rapid economic growth was due to the 16-month long ongoing trade war between the United States and China, which deeply dampened consumer confidence and hurt sales of goods. However, this only partially explains this quarter’s lower rate. Far before the trade war commenced in June 2018, China’s economic engine had already been cooling down; the GDP growth rate had dropped from 10.6% in 2010 to 6.9% in 2015. This cool-down has begun stabilizing, with the growth rate only decreasing by about 1% in the most recent 4 years. The primary factors that caused the slowdown have been declining industrial output and low productivity in the service sector.

The decline in industrial output can be traced back to China slowly losing its comparative advantage in manufacturing production. This has been due to its aging population and rising wages. To address this, China is seeking to achieve qualitative growth by shifting from the current labor-intensive, low value-added production to “smart” growth, which relies more on high-quality technology production, green energy, and services. These core ideas are enshrined in China’s ambitious “Made in China 2025” (MIC 2025).

MIC 2025 is aimed at improving innovation in China’s manufacturing industry to enhance the sector’s production and competitive capabilities. Major fields that MIC 2025 intends to improve include next-generation Information technology, high-end numerical control machinery and robotics, aerospace and aviation equipment, maritime engineering equipment and high-tech maritime vessel manufacturing, advanced rail equipment, energy-saving and new energy vehicles, new materials, and biomedicine and high-performance medical devices.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce described these industries as “critical to economic competitiveness and growth in the 21st century.” However, the U.S. is concerned about Chinese rhetoric promoting “indigenous innovation, domestic brands, secure and controllable standards, and localization of production and data.” It criticizes China for not following its commitment made by President Xi Jinping in 2018 at Davos, which outlined strong support for globalization and open-market principles. The U.S. is concerned that the rhetoric and practices of MIC 2025 may not fully coincide with China’s commitment to market-oriented reforms.

Moreover, the U.S. also expressed its serious concerns over the potential security implications of MIC 2025. Forced technology transfers, intellectual property theft, ill-treatment of foreign capital, and cyber espionage could help enhance China’s domestic manufacturing production. Furthermore, the U.S. fears that these could also benefit China’s military capability. For example, some of the relevant industries, such as aerospace, aviation equipment, and next-generation information technology could be utilized to develop more advanced unmanned technologies that would enhance the fighting capability of Chinese drones.

One industry appeared to attract the most concern: information and communication technology (ICT). The information and telecommunications industry is one of the major focuses of Made in China 2025. China’s huge commitment to develop and, most importantly, construct ICT infrastructure, such as 5G, reflects its understanding that the ICT industry is crucial for sustaining domestic economic growth. Despite its primary purpose of economic development, ICT technology’s obvious spillovers into military capability and surveillance continue to worry the U.S.

It is understandable that the U.S. feels threatened by China’s desire to rapidly expand its ICT industry. However, the U.S. decision to block, blacklist, or even sanction some of China’s leading ICT companies, such as Huawei or ZTE, undermines any future initiatives to push for international oversight or regulation of ICT implementation. As China continues to carry on the developments outlined in MIC 2025, the current means of U.S. interference, though it addresses security concerns, may be both strategically and economically counterproductive.

China’s sustainable growth should not, and will not, solely depend on MIC 2025. Since the ultimate goal of China’s economic policies is to maintain a high growth rate, its policies need to target both its declining industrial production and its burgeoning services sector. Therefore, China’s development will depend on a synergistic combination of MIC 2025 policies, continuous domestic reforms, and suitable trade deals, all of which will encourage greater competition which leads to higher quality domestic growth.

Due to the fact that MIC 2025 is mostly driven by internal factors, the U.S. response is unlikely to contain China’s manufacturing sector development. Rather than attempt to contain MIC 2025, the U.S. would be best served by encouraging its private sector to further participate in the growth of the Chinese economy. As MIC 2025 encourages technological advancement, Chinese private companies will increase their demand for both financial and technological services. U.S. companies are the most competitively suited to meet this demand. By recognizing the inevitability of China’s manufacturing growth, and positioning itself to help that growth in its own comparatively advantageous way, the U.S. will expedite both Chinese economic growth and its own.

Cross-border services could bring in a win-win situation for the two countries. In 2017, the services sector in the U.S. added around 77.4% of the value to its GDP, and services make up around one-third of U.S. total export of goods and services. The Trump administration has been considering reducing the trade deficit by increasing more U.S. exports; however, the trade negotiations with China pay little attention to securing a U.S. advantage vis-a-vis Japan and Europe, the other two major service exporters to China. Even up until the end of 2018, China’s service industry contributed only around 50% of its GDP, which is about one-third less than in comparative developed countries. As China’s services industry becomes a top choice for foreign investors, foreign direct investment (FDI) in it has climbed from 24.7% (2005) to 68.1% (2018) of China’s total FDI, which suggests huge growth potential.

If China wants to sustain its rapid economic growth, then moving up the value chain and specializing in more economically significant sectors is a must. Cross-border services are not only growing 60% faster than traditional trade in goods; these services also generate much higher economic value. Despite the long wait, China’s announcement of more specific, deepening reforms and opening up with ‘Chinese characteristics’ indicate that these reforms will continue. On the international level, given the fact that economic regionalization has been increasing due to geographic proximity, China’s integration with other Asian countries in multilateral free trade partnerships, such as RCEP, requires that China further committed to market liberalization in order to satisfy other states, such as Japan, South Korea, and India.

For the U.S., exporting services to China is a broad market. In 2018, travel services and IP charges accounted for the two largest shares (56.1% and 14.8%, respectively) of U.S. cross-border services exports to China. Of the U.S. service exports to China, only 8% are financial services. As China’s reforms are gradually implemented, such as lifting price controls, adjusting tax incentives, eliminating investment barriers, and accelerating the opening up of the capital account, there is an increasing demand for services imports. As China’s largest services importer, the U.S. would benefit the most by working with China to fully liberalize its services sector.

By sidelining itself, the U.S. will not only lose its ability to investigate the perceived threat of China but also the potential role it could play by participating in China’s opening up, which would provide both economic gain and political leverage. The recent enactment of Decree No. 720 and Decree No. 722 of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China focused on modifying regulations in foreign capital banks and insurance companies, as well as improving the business environment, indicating that China is taking steps to improve the institutional structure of its services sector. The entry of U.S. capital at this moment could become a strong market force pushing China towards deepening, liberal economic reforms. Going the opposite direction will only cause more U.S. businesses to leave the Chinese market in the dust while other Chinese trading partners seize this opportunity, just as what happened when European and Japanese auto companies took advantage of a 2018 Chinese tariff cut that left out their U.S. competitors.

The only way the Chinese economy could continue moving forward under the current international environment is to accelerate reforming and opening up. As ICAS Senior Research Fellow, Sourabh Gupta, has stated, “Pressure from the US and Europe will in fact be a crucial driver of these reforms which, again, will hold China in good stead”. At this key point, where both countries are undergoing economic structural change, it is crucial for the two largest economies in the world to use this opportunity to cooperate and contribute to the stability of the world economy. More economic decoupling, instead of cooperation, may harm the U.S.’s comparative advantage. While the EU and Japan continue to explore their own ways of participating in China’s economy, the U.S. should use these trade negotiations as a vantage point for reconsidering both their bilateral relationship and its private sector’s advantage point in the Chinese market.

 

Yilun Zhang is a Research and Administrative Assistant at the Institute for China-America Studies.
Mengze Li is a Research Assistant at the Institute for China-America Studies.
This article was edited by Stephen Dwyer, a Research Assistant at ICAS.