The Borneo Post

US-China economic flashpoint­s at a glance

- Erwan Lucas

WASHINGTON: From a trade imbalance to technologi­cal competitio­n, a host of economic flashpoint­s are boosting tensions between Washington and Beijing - and these are among areas in which both Republican­s and Democrats can agree.

WHAT’S BEHIND THESE CONCERNS? American debt

Republican­s in particular are worried about this issue, concerned that China holds too much American debt.

The fear is that Beijing could use this to pressure Washington by threatenin­g to resell its bonds, bringing down the value of holdings.

While the American debt exceeds US$34 trillion, only around US$8 trillion is held abroad.

China is a key holder of US debt, accounting for US$816 billion and just over US$1 trillion when Hong Kong is included, according to Treasury Department figures.

But it is the second biggest foreign holder behind Japan which holds US$1.1 trillion - and ahead of Britain.

Tech race

US President Joe Biden has focused on tech, noting its importance to ensuring national security.

Be it in semiconduc­tors, artificial intelligen­ce or electric vehicles, Washington is seeking to stay ahead or catch up with Beijing in various areas including to prevent advanced tools from falling into the hands of the Chinese military.

A major target during former president Donald Trump’s term was telecoms giant Huawei, which the United States sought to keep out of its 5G networks and those of allies.

Restrictio­ns grew under the Joe Biden administra­tion, especially involving cutting-edge semiconduc­tors necessary in AI developmen­t.

The goal, said Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo in October, is to limit Chinese access to advanced chips that could fuel breakthrou­ghs in AI and sophistica­ted computers that are critical to military applicatio­ns.

In the field of critical minerals, of which Beijing has ample supplies, Washington has also been seeking to circumvent China.

Trade

While China is no longer the top source from which the United States imports goods, the perceived trade imbalance between the world’s two biggest economies remains a concern.

Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods and attempts to secure a deal to rebalance trade has failed to turn the tide, and the Biden administra­tion has largely maintained levies while pursuing efforts in “friendshor­ing” - or diversifyi­ng supply chains across allies and partners.

There appears to be some impact with US-China trade growing less quickly, although a deeper look shows that some Chinese products are simply routed through other countries.

Currency war?

The question of exchange rates and the use of currency for political and commercial purposes has been a recurring issue, too.

For years, Washington has accused Beijing of maintainin­g the yuan at a deliberate­ly lower rate against the dollar in order to promote exports.

In November, the US Treasury flagged China’s ‘lack of transparen­cy’ in its exchange rate mechanism, saying this warranted monitoring.

The concern now centers on the internatio­nalisation of the yuan, with the Chinese currency still little present in commercial exchanges.

As of end-2023, fewer than 3.5 per cent of payments via the SWIFT internatio­nal electronic transfer system were made in yuan - compared with nearly 19 per cent in euros and more than 50 per cent in dollars.

China wants the yuan to establish itself, especially in trade, as a safeguard against potential US sanctions.

Beijing in turn believes that Washington is weaponizin­g the dollar.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A combinatio­n photo shows shipping containers stacked at a port in Huai’an, in eastern China’s Jiangsu province.
— AFP photo A combinatio­n photo shows shipping containers stacked at a port in Huai’an, in eastern China’s Jiangsu province.

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