Trump’s Trade Wars: A New World Order?
Trump’s Trade Wars: A New World
Order?
The escalating trade war between the United States and China risks a
breakdown in global trade as the world’s two largest economies contemplate
encouraging the emergence of trading environments that they would dominate.
Sunday, 22 September 2019 09:25 GMT
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President Trump’s declared economic protectionism
has taken the United States’ international relations with several foes and
allies to some uncharted territories. His open-ended trade wars toward several
nations have triggered criticism among conservatives and liberals alike in the
United States. He has justified his actions by arguing for a downturn of
America’s trade deficit. However, a recent Harvard CAPS/Harris Poll survey
shows 63 percent of registered voters said that tariffs imposed on Chinese
products ultimately hurt the U.S. more than China; while 74 percent said that
American consumers are shouldering most of the burden of those tariffs. (1) The political network funded in part by
billionaire libertarian Charles Koch has contested Mr. Trump’s approach toward
China, and decided to shape an alternative strategy in the year of the U.S.
Presidential elections. One Koch senior official has acknowledged, “It doesn’t
penetrate with the people that are willing to go along with the argument that
you have to punish China.” There is now a pursuit of a “two steps back
strategy,” which will involve putting together a team of almost 100 business
leaders to call on the Trump administration and lawmakers to end the trade war
with China. (2)
In this paper, James M. Dorsey, senior fellow at
the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Singapore's Nanyang
Technological University and the National University of Singapore’s Middle East
Institute, examines the ramifications of President Trump’s policy of economic
sanctions and tariffs vis-à-vis several nations and international groupings. He
also looks at China’s counter strategy, and whether Middle Eastern countries,
like Saudi Arabia, will be caught in the web of the current trade wars.
US President Donald J. Trump may not like armed
conflict, but he sure loves economic warfare, whether it is to impose his
political will on countries, protect sectors of the U.S. economy, secure more
preferential trade terms, or stop others from gaining technological advantage.
The list of countries subject to sanctions or
import tariffs designed to force changes in either economic, military, or
geopolitical policies is long and includes both U.S. allies and rivals. Since Mr.
Trump assumed presidency in January 2017, he has sanctioned China, North Korea,
Russia, Venezuela, Iran, the European Union, Myanmar, Syria and Cuba. In one of
his first actions after entering the Oval Office, he pulled the United States
out of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP). (3). He has also sought to undermine the World
Trade Organization (WTO), a US-inspired pillar of global trade. (4)
Mr. Trump’s liberal use of sanctions amounts to
more than a penchant for economic warfare in an effort to create trade terms
more advantageous to the United States. Economic warfare is the president’s
strategy to shape a new world order that is likely to be multi-polar. Almost
three years into Mr. Trump’s administration, it is proving to be a strategy
with unintended consequences. Trump is not the only leader to discover that the
employment of trade, commerce, and investment as not only an economic but also
political tool can be a double-edged sword.
Conspiring by Default
So is Chinese president Xi Jinping as he confronts
mounting anti-Chinese sentiment in Eurasia and greater competition on China’s
border in the Russian Far East. Both leaders are forced to respond to external
shocks, like mounting tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran in the wake of
recent brazen drone and missile attacks on the kingdom’s oil installations. These
attacks have led to a temporary cut of Saudi oil production by half, and are
likely to change trading patterns, particularly in energy, not only of China;
but also, of multiple other Asian states, including Japan, South Korea and
India.
Mr. Trump’s protectionist penchant for economic
warfare, 15 months before next year’s US presidential election, that breaks
with 85 years of U.S. trade and economic policy focussed on free trade and open
markets, has yet to produce a foreign policy success. China and Russia,
determined to counter U.S. power, particularly in Asia, have forged ever-closer
ties. Iran and North Korea have demonstrated the resilience to endure harsh
sanctions. Nicholas Maduro retains his grip on Venezuela while Europe is
increasingly exasperated with America and discussing ways of improving
relations with Russia to counter China. (5)
Mr. Trump’s renegotiation of the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), renamed the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement
(USMC), weakened protections for investors in Mexico as well as government
commitment to allow foreign companies to bid for procurement contracts. While adding
a review process to the agreement, this policy has created a sense of
instability. Mr. Trump enhanced uncertainty by subsequently threatening to
impose new tariffs on Mexico because he did not like the country’s handling of
Central Asian asylum seekers. (6)
Former World Bank president, U.S. trade
representative and deputy-secretary of state Robert B. Zoellick predicts that Mr.
Trump is likely to continuously wage economic warfare and keep trade partners
off balance. “He will not change. Trade…is a core issue for the president’s
political base. He must keep it boiling,” Mr. Zoellick said in a Wall Street
Journal op-ed entitled “The Trade War’s Winners Don’t Include Us”. (7)
As a result, damage to U.S. credibility and ability
to regulate the international political and economic order may outlast Mr. Trump’s
sanctions and tariffs-driven policies. Countries like China and Russia are
likely to expand trade relations with third countries, and shift supply chains
at the expense of preferential U.S. access to markets. They may also defy U.S.
secondary sanctions, which target third country companies and entities, which
refuse to comply with, for example, sanctions against Iran, and initiate ways
of undermining the global reserve function of the U.S. dollar.
The
Trade War Timeline [PIIE]
U.S. losses are palatable. The TPP has lowered
trade barriers for member countries (8) but not for the United States. The EU has
gained preferential access to Japan (9) while China has retaliated with tariffs of
21.8 percent on U.S. products (10) and lowered them to 6.7 percent for others. (11) The U.S. Treasury has doled out billions of
dollars to agricultural exporters (12) who have lost significant market share in
China that they will find difficult to recover. U.S. manufacturers are moving
operations to third countries (13) to evade the impact of the U.S.-China trade
war while foreign direct investment in the United States is dropping. (14) Chinese investment in the United States has
plummeted in the last two years. (15) Meanwhile, India and the United States are
erecting barriers of their own (16) that will negatively affect bilateral trade
while negotiations with the EU are stalled. (17)
Mr. Trump’s trade wars have reduced the United
States’ ability to establish rules and standards that govern key sectors like
medical services, finance, intellectual-property rights, data access and
security; and enable the fight against corruption and promote transparency;
“This president disdains rules; he acts as if governments control purchases
like in old-style mercantilism,” Mr. Zoellick said. “Trump thinks that trade
policy is a tweet at 3 o’clock in the morning,” added Democratic presidential
candidate Bernie Saunders. (18)
Bullying Does the Job
Mr. Trump’s erratic approach towards policy-making
and implementation, involving the belief that bullying will do the job and
vacillation between bluster and moderation, has projected him as an unreliable
and impossible negotiator. This approach showcases a sharp contrast to his
self-styled portrayal of himself as the master of the ‘Art of the Deal’. At the
risk of sparking the emergence of parallel economic worlds, one dominated by
the United States, the other by China, Mr. Trump assumes his trade war and
efforts to block Chinese access to U.S. technology would sabotage Mr. Xi’s
‘Made in China 2025’ program designed to make China commercially and
industrially self-sufficient. Mr. Trump further sees his trade war as a way of
halting China’s efforts to replace the U.S. as the world’s foremost,
cutting-edge economy. Reporting on a recent visit by Mr. Xi to Henan Province,
Communist Party newspaper Global Times reported the president had “urged the
development of the real economy bolstered by manufacturing, with self-reliance
as the basis of all endeavours.” (19)
Mr. Trump may be right in his identification of the
threat that China poses to U.S. economic and geopolitical dominance. The
problem is that his policy solution risks accelerating the process rather than
pausing or reversing it. Rather than stimulating research and development
needed to ensure an American lead, Mr. Trump seems to believe that undermining
China’s abilities is the key. The threat of the demise of a global market and
the rise of parallel markets appears to have reinforced Chinese determination
to become self-reliant to the degree possible.
“A more competitive United States would be a stabilizing
force,” said Ely Ratnert, the executive vice president of the Center for a New
American Security and former deputy national security adviser to Vice President
Joe Biden, arguing that U.S. strategy should involve both engagement and
containment. (20)
Trump's
Looming Trade Ward [AP]
Differences between China’s response to U.S.
sanctions on telecommunications equipment and systems maker ZTE Corporation
that threatened to bring the company down and Huawei, another major Chinese
telecom equipment manufacturer, suggest that Mr. Xi has factored the emergence
of parallel worlds into his thinking. Last year, he phoned Mr. Trump to plead
with him to lift a crippling seven-year ban on the acquisition of U.S.
components by ZTE. (21) The ban, imposed in response to allegation
of ZTE’s busting of sanctions against Iran and North Korea, effectively sounded
the death knell for ZTE, which has a workforce of 75,000. Mr. Trump agreed to
lift the ban in exchange for ZTE agreeing to pay a U.S. $1.3 billion fine,
undertake sweeping management changes, and hire American compliance executives
to monitor internally the company.
No such deal was available to Huawei, neither would
Mr. Xi be willing to accept another deal that he would have perceived as
reminiscent of China’s historical humiliations at the hands of Western powers.
Huawei has responded defiantly to U.S. sanctions, (22) the detention in Canada at the behest of the
United States of its Chief Financial Officer, Meng Wanzhou, (23) daughter of the company’s founder, Ren
Zhengfei, on charges of financial fraud, sanctions violations, and obstruction
of justice; and a global campaign to prevent companies from acquiring Huawei’s
5G technology. The US asserts that Huawei has close ties to China’s military
and security forces. (24) In line with what has been termed the
decoupling of the U.S. and Chinese economies, Huawei introduced Harmony, its
own operating system to rival Android; and make it less dependent on U.S.
technology. (25)
In September 2019, the Trump administration took a
further step towards decoupling with proposed new rules, which would allow the
United States to exert greater control over foreign investment, by broadening
the government’s authority to block technology and real estate transactions.
The rules would give the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States,
or CFIUS, greater power to stop foreign investment in areas the U.S. deems protected,
a move that primarily aims to bar China from access to sensitive American
technology and other valuable assets. Beyond technology, the rules would red
flag investment in infrastructure, such as telecommunications, utilities and
energy as well as companies that collect sensitive personal data related to
finance and health, particularly of individuals and/or federal employees
involved in national security. Real estate acquisitions would be vetted on
proximity to military installations, airports and ports. (26)
US
Trade Deficit [European Data News]
Chinese Trade Policy Backfires
If Mr. Trump has demonstrated his inclination to
wage economic wars, his Chinese counterpart, Mr. Xi, sees trade and foreign
investment as a way of not only securing economic growth by imposing
increasingly controversial commercial terms; but also, achieving China’s
geopolitical goals and promoting its concept of an invasive surveillance state.
With countries like Pakistan, Malaysia, Myanmar and Nepal questioning projects
that fail to respond to local needs and fail to contribute to economic growth
because they rely on Chinese labor and materials, China has conceded that it
may have to make adjustments to a policy that by default rather than design
could end up contributing to decoupling.
"It is normal and understandable that
development focus can change at different stages in different countries,
especially with changes in government. So China can also make some strategic
adjustments when cooperating with these countries, but it is definitely not a
reconsideration of the B&R (Belt and Road) initiative," Wang Jun,
deputy director of the Department of Information at the China Center for
International Economic Exchanges told the Global Times newspaper. (27)
Mr. Jun spoke as Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi,
was confronted on a visit to Islamabad with Pakistani demand that China should
refocus its U.S. $45 billion plus investment in the China Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC), the single largest country infrastructure investment related
to the Belt and Road initiative, to emphasize manufacturing and poverty
reduction projects. (28) The Pakistani demand amounted to a rejection
of China’s approach that appeared to position Pakistan as a raw materials
supplier for China, an export market for Chinese products and labour, and an
experimental ground for the export of the surveillance state China is rolling
out, particularly in its troubled north-western province of Xinjiang. (29)
How
the US-China Trade War Escalated [STATISTA]
Elsewhere in Asia, some countries were putting
their money where their mouth was. Chinese commercial terms prompted Nepal,
like Pakistan to withdraw from a Chinese-funded dam project. (30) Furthermore, protests against the forced
resettlement of eight Nepali villages persuaded CWE Investment Corporation, a
subsidiary of China Three Gorges, to cancel a 750MW hydropower project. (31)
In July, Malaysia restarted the China-linked East
Coast Rail Link project after forcing China to agree to downsizing construction
costs by a third. The rail project, led by China Communications Construction
Co. and Malaysia Rail Link Sdn., was cancelled in 2018 by Prime Minister
Mahathir Mohamad after he balked at the U.S. $16 billion cost. (32) The rail scheme was one of several
projects, including a natural gas pipeline, suspended or cancelled by Mr.
Mahathir after taking office in May 2018. (33) Similarly, Myanmar forced China to scale
back its Kyaukphyu deep-sea port project from U.S. $7.5 billion to 1.3 billion.
(34)
Even China’s approach towards trade with Russia,
its closest ally, has sparked anti-Chinese sentiment and raised questions of
whether the current state of affairs is sustainable. Chinese investment in
Russia is a fraction of China’s investment in other regions like sub-Saharan
Africa or South America and less than China’s expanding stake in countries like
Nigeria and Brazil. A Chinese-Russian agreement on economic cooperation in
Siberia, Russia’s Far East and China’s Northeast for a period of nine years
ending in 2018 has fallen far short of expectations.
The agreement identified 91 joint investment
projects of which only 11 materialized. (35) Similarly, energy failed to live up to its
billing. CEFC China Energy’s plan to acquire a 14 percent stake in Russia’s
largest, and majority state-owned, oil company, Rosneft, never happened.
Neither did an agreed U.S. $25 billion investment in Russia’s Power of Siberia
gas pipeline. The pipeline’s export of 38 billion cubic metres of natural gas
is but one source for China that in 2017 imported more than 90 billion cubic
meters from Australia, Qatar, and Turkmenistan.
Pacific
Rim States Affected by Trump's war on Free Trade [STATISTA]
Russia scholar Leo Aaron charged that the lopsided
nature of Chinese-Russian economic relations fits the definition of Karl Marx
and Vladimir Lenin of colonial trade, in which one country becomes a raw
material appendage of another. “China is Russia’s second-largest trading
partner (after the EU) and Russia’s largest individual partner in both exports
and imports. For China, the Russian market is at best second-rate. Russia ranks
tenth in Chinese exports and does not make it into the top ten in either
imports or total trade,” Mr. Aaron said. He noted that three-quarters of
Russia’s exports to China were raw materials as opposed to consumer goods,
electronics and machinery that accounted for the bulk of Chinese sales to
Russia. (36)
More ominously, China starting in Central Asia, a
crucial region that borders on its strategic province of Xinjiang, is making
deployment of its intrusive surveillance systems a pre-condition for
investment; and in some cases appears willing to supply the infrastructure at
no cost as part of a Smart City project developed by Huawei for initial
roll-out in former Soviet states. (37) Huawei says the system, which involves
installing thousands of security cameras equipped with artificial intelligence
and facial recognition technology in public places, has been exported to 160
cities worldwide.
Liu Jiaxing, head of Huawei’s representative office
in Uzbekistan, disclosed China’s insistence on adopting its surveillance
approach in an interview with an Uzbek news outlet. “Investors will only go
where the situation is stable. In view of this, the implementation of the Safe
City project is very important for Uzbekistan as it will help the country
develop its investment potential,” Mr. Liu said. (38) With no transparent regulation and oversight
that ensure Central Asians’ privacy rights, China is likely to have access to
data collected by the Smart City technology. Kyrgyzstan’s interior minister
said data, one collected, would be handled at no cost to the government by
Chinese National Electronics Import and Export Corporation, or CEIEC; a company
believed to be tied to the Chinese military whose technology is deployed in
Xinjiang, China’s surveillance system laboratory. (39)
India's
Retaliation against US Exports [PIIE]
A Joker in the Game
The Middle East may not be at the core of the trade
wars and policies that appear to be reshaping world trade. However, harsh U.S.
sanctions on Iran and opposition to them by China, Russia and Europe have
enabled Saudi Arabia and Iran to put their stamp on them. Devastating attacks
in September on two Saudi oil facilities, which were claimed by Iranian-backed
Houthi rebels in Yemen and blamed on Iran by the United States and less
directly by Saudi Arabia, have prompted the kingdom’s major Asian customers to
look at diversifying their supplies, which could force them to upgrade their
ability to refine heavier grades of crude. “The key is to gradually get rid of
heavy reliance on Middle Eastern oil. There is a consistent risk to oil supply
from Middle East countries. China has been diversifying its oil suppliers,” said
Zhu Guangming, an analyst eith consultancy Sublime China Information. (40)
China’s diversification options are Russia, the United
States and Iran. Russia may be China’s safest bet as long as the U.S. imposes
sanctions on Iran while the U.S. is tricky given the trade war. Trading
patterns in the immediate aftermath of the attacks in Saudi Araba of Unipec,
the trading arm of Chinese oil giant Sinopec, highlight China’s dilemma. Unipec
was rushing in early September to sell U.S. oil it had acquired as China
imposed a five-percent tariff on imports of American oil. Two weeks later, it
was chartering ships to import U.S. light crude to compensate for Saudi
shortfalls. (41)
A careful reading of Saudi and U.S. responses to
the Saudi attacks suggests subtle differences between the two governments. They
mask several emerging fundamental issues that could have far-reaching
consequences for the Gulf’s security architecture and energy export focus. U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Mr. Trump explicitly pointed the finger at
Iran as being directly responsible, (42) while Saudi Arabia stopped short of blaming
the Islamic republic, saying that its preliminary findings showed that Iranian
weapons had been used in the attack. (43) Iran has denied any involvement. (44)
Saudi Arabia’s initial reluctance to unambiguously
blame Iran may have a lot to do with Trump’s America First-driven response to
the attacks, which appeared to contradict the Carter Doctrine proclaimed in
1980 by President Jimmy Carter. The doctrine, a cornerstone of the Saudi-U.S.
relationship, stated that the United States would use military force, if
necessary, to defend its national interests in the Gulf.
Mr. Trump’s apparent weakening of the United
States’ commitment to the defense of the kingdom, encapsulated in the doctrine,
risks fundamentally altering the relationship, already troubled by Saudi
conduct of the more than four-year-long war in Yemen and last year’s killing of
journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
Signalling a break with the Carter doctrine, Trump
was quick to point out that the attacks were on Saudi Arabia, not on the United
States; and suggested it was for the Saudis to respond. “I haven’t promised the
Saudis that. We have to sit down with the Saudis and work something out. That
was an attack on Saudi Arabia, and that was not an attack on us. But we would
certainly help them,” Mr. Trump said without identifying what kind of support
the U.S. would be willing to provide. (45)
Despite blustering that the United States was
“locked and loaded,” Mr. Trump insisted that “we have a lot of options but I’m
not looking at options right now.” Mr. Trump further called into question the
nature of the U.S.-Saudi defense relationship by declaring that “If we decide to
do something, they’ll be very much involved, and that includes payment. And
they understand that fully.”
Conclusion
The structure of global trade is by design or
default in flux with potentially far-reaching consequences for international
relations as well as political systems in various countries. The escalating
trade war between the United States and China risks a breakdown in global trade
as the world’s two largest economies contemplate encouraging the emergence of
trading environments that they would dominate. Add to that, the impact of Mr.
Trump’s penchant for economic sanctions, that in the case of Iran, have sparked
escalating tension between Saudi Arabia and the United States that could
reshape security perspectives in the Gulf and could lead to alternative flows
of energy to Asia’s largest importers. The possible decoupling of the Chinese
and U.S. economies would make it easier for China to politically align some
beneficiaries of China’s Belt and Road initiative by imposing its concept of a
21st-century Orwellian surveillance state on them.
About the author
Senior
Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Adjunct Senior
Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s
Institute for Fan Culture, and co-host of the New Books in Middle Eastern
Studies podcast. James is the author of “The Turbulent World of Middle East
Soccer” blog.
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?????. ????? ????? ??????? ??????? "?????????? ?????" ?
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