The Free Press Journal

The US is only helping China

- BY JOHN BACHTELL

The Trump administra­tion’s declaratio­n of a trade war with China has implicatio­ns for that country’s latest round of ambitious economic reforms as well as for global economic developmen­t generally. China refuses to be bullied by Trump’s imposition of $34 billion in tariffs and the threat to impose $500 billion more. China has swiftly retaliated with its own $34 billion in tariffs on US goods.

The purpose of tariffs is not chiefly to overcome the trade imbalance between the two countries and protect American workers. Trump’s real goal, besides energising his base for the 2018 elections and splitting the ranks of the US labour movement, is to thwart China from becoming a direct economic rival and make it abandon its socialist-oriented economic strategy. This flows from Trump’s new national security strategy, which declared China and Russia strategic economic and military rivals.

Until now, China has competed with other developing countries to produce consumer goods for advanced industrial­ised economies. In the future, it will be competing more directly with the US and other advanced capitalist economies in the advanced manufactur­ing and technologi­cal sectors.

Trump wants China to dismantle its “Made in China 2025” strategy, a 10-year plan to make the country a world leader in key scientific and technical fields and advanced manufactur­ing, with an aim to sharply increase productivi­ty (which is approximat­ely one-third that of the US economy).

Trump is demanding China abandon public sector investment­s in basic science, research, and innovation as well as its targets to raise the domestic content of its manufactur­ed components to 40 percent by 2020 and 70 percent by 2025.

Further, Trump’s administra­tion officials want China to eliminate requiremen­t that US firms seeking access to its market must enter into agreements to share technology and its restrictio­ns on US corporate investment. They say China has put US corporatio­ns at an economic “disadvanta­ge” by stealing intellectu­al property rights and technologi­cal secrets.

China disputes these charges and insists it is operating within World Trade Organizati­on guidelines. The fact China leads the world in patent applicatio­ns exposes the racist lie that it doesn’t possess the wherewitha­l to develop its own intellectu­al and technologi­cal innovation.

The chief architect of this policy is White House National Trade Director Peter Navarro, who “took aim at China’s internal plan to develop cutting-edge industries like robotics, new energy vehicles, advanced rail and shipping, and aerospace, saying the country could not be allowed to dominate technologi­es that will be an important source of jobs and growth for the United States in decades to come,” The New York Times reported.

Navarro is considered on the fringe by most economists and advocates some of the most extreme measures against China, which he sees as posing an existentia­l threat to the US.

China sees the rise of economic nationalis­m as a threat to its domestic economy and to global economic developmen­t. Despite Trump’s pressure, it has declared it will never agree to abandon its developmen­tal path of creating a “modern, democratic, culturally advanced, harmonious, and sustainabl­e socialism” by 2050.

Trump’s “America First” economic nationalis­m will actually hurt US workers and farmers by closing markets and making goods uncompetit­ive. It undermines the dominant role of US expansioni­sm and ironically opens the door for China to become the global economic leader.

The 19th Communist Party of China (CPC) Congress in October 2017 projected a new round of openness and bold economic, social, and governance reforms that extend decades into the future. The socialist market economy will continue to dominate in the new era.

But instead of a model based on export of consumer products, the goal of “Made in China 2025” is to remake the country into a global high-tech manufactur­ing power and radically increase productivi­ty through innovation and cutting-edge digital technology, artificial intelligen­ce, and big data. The target is to gear production toward quality over quantity.

The newly created industries will be geared first to satisfying the rapidly growing domestic market and then later compete in the global economy. In addition to providing the conditions for private and public enterprise­s to promote innovation, China is in the midst of a massive modernisat­ion of its infrastruc­ture, including creating a world-class system of universiti­es, research institutio­ns, and hospitals with the expectatio­n of attracting world-class scientific talent.

Developmen­t and sustainabi­lity will go hand-inhand to create an “ecological civilisati­on”. China invested $126 billion in renewables in 2017, a 31 percent increase over 2016, making it to the world’s biggest investor in the field. A high-speed rail system extending 35,000 kilometers (nearly 22,000 miles) is half complete. Production of electric vehicles is ramping up.

The ambitious and mind-boggling developmen­t plans and the new era of economic reforms means China will continue to take giant steps toward a modern socialist society and increasing­ly shape global economic and political developmen­ts along the way.

Trump and his economic nationalis­t plans for trade wars and white nationalis­t immigratio­n policies will also shape global developmen­t, though not always as he might intend. His haphazard tariff policies will not only hurt workers in the US and around the world, but also — whether he knows it or not — undermine the dominance of US capitalism in the world economy and global governance. Trump’s policies run counter to the new stage of globalisat­ion taking shape and are doomed to failure.

The writer is national chair of the Communist Party, USA.

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