Shanghai Daily

Discrepanc­ies inflated US calculatio­n of trade deficit

- (Xinhua)

A “HUGE” trade deficit with China is reportedly behind the US administra­tion’s plan to slap tariffs of up to US$60 billion of Chinese imports and restrict Chinese investment. But data sometimes lies, and could shield the bigger picture.

What the United States claims to be a “record trade deficit” with China is an inflated figure.

According to US Census Bureau data, the trade deficit with China ran to a record US$375 billion last year, while China’s customs data showed the country’s surplus with the United States stood at 1.87 trillion yuan (about US$298 billion).

The gap resulted mainly from difference­s in statistica­l approaches, such as whether or not to include transit trade in the calculatio­ns, according to Zhang Monan, researcher with China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges. Such discrepanc­ies have inflated the US calculatio­n of its trade deficit with China by about 20 percent every year, according to Minister of Commerce Zhong Shan.

The United States is home to many multinatio­nal companies that have a global supply chain, but the current total value statistica­l method has distorted reality, analysts said.

An iPhone, for example, uses components made in different countries around the world and is only assembled and manufactur­ed in China, but the calculatio­n of trade statistics attributed most of the value to China.

“In this case, China is taking the blame for others,” Zhang said.

She added that most of the profits actually went to US companies but the value of the products was reflected in Chinese exports, resulting in inaccurate statistics. What’s more, when talking about the deficit with China, the United States always played down trade of services, according to Tu Xinquan, professor at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics.

Data from China’s Ministry of Commerce showed that the country has a huge service trade deficit with the United States, and the gap has been widening.

From 2006 to 2016, China’s service trade deficit with the United States increased by more than 30 times. The figure reached US$255.4 billion last year, official data showed.

Statistica­l difference­s aside, the fact that the United States is not only running a trade deficit with China, but many other countries means the root cause of the imbalance is the US economic structure, which features low savings and high consumptio­n.

In the past decades, US businesses transferre­d their manufactur­ing bases to countries with cheap labor and low costs, which helped drive up their profits and benefited consumers.

In a world whose prosperity has been built on the free flow of trade and investment, price-sensitive consumers largely decided the directions of trade, either for exports or imports.

“China has been a major market where the United States enjoyed its fastest export growth, and an important cause of the trade imbalance is the fact that many US goods are less competitiv­e in the Chinese market,” said Long Guoqiang, deputy director of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

Solutions to the US-China trade deficit do not come from cutting exports from China, but from US enterprise­s making their products more competitiv­e, he said.

Joe Kaeser, CEO of Siemens AG, held the same view.

“I believe people should not confuse the lack of competitiv­eness with unfair trade. If companies lack competitiv­eness, they need to invest in innovation and people developmen­t in order to catch up,” he said in Beijing.

Another factor that has been overlooked is that US control of high-tech exports to China contribute­d a lot to the trade deficit. As China has repeatedly stressed, the trade imbalance between the two countries is mainly a result of different economic structures, industrial competitiv­eness, and internatio­nal division of labor, and China has never sought a trade surplus as the flow of trade is determined by the market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China