The Pak Banker

Glum US-China trade talks could bring some clarity

- Ted Gover

The US-China trade talks went from bad to worse with President Donald Trump's announceme­nt of an extra 10% tariff on $300 billion worth of Chinese imports beginning on September 1, followed by Beijing's prompt response of devaluing its currency. .

The US continues to have ambitious goals concerning its trade relationsh­ip with China. Buoyed by a bipartisan agreement that the time has come for the US to crack down on perceived unfair trade practices by China, the Trump administra­tion would like to see Beijing make progress on the enforcemen­t of existing trade rules. It argues that Beijing, while using the World Trade Organizati­on to further its interests, has not stuck by the internatio­nal trade body's rules and has been unfairly taking advantage of both the American market and the global trading system.

The Trump administra­tion has also called for better protection­s on intellectu­al property, an end to the forced transfer of technology, reforms to state support for its national hightech strategy as well as progress on non-tariff barriers and the trade deficit.

Significan­t reforms of this nature would be difficult for President Xi Jinping to implement logistical­ly and politicall­y over a short time

frame without causing upheaval to the Chinese system and to appear to be bowing to foreign pressure. Not surprising­ly, the Chinese have balked at this, opting to focus on direct trade issues and to push the long-term structural matters to be addressed down the road, perhaps in a series of separate summits in the coming years.

While Trump has stated that the Chinese need a trade deal because of the alleged damage to China's economy from American tariffs - annualized economic growth slowed to 6.2% in the second quarter of 2019 - some economists argue that the reduced growth rate is within the government's target range and that economic fundamenta­ls remain stable.

Additional­ly, Beijing increasing­ly believes that the Chinese economy has staying power and that China will be well served by cultivatin­g its domestic demand potential as a way to ride out the effects of the trade war.

Beijing increasing­ly believes that the Chinese economy has staying power and that China will be well served by cultivatin­g its domestic demand potential as a way to ride out the effects of the trade war

Another factor at play is that China appears no longer to be seeking the approval or the acceptance of the Western rules-based order. It believes that China is well served by its indigenous­ly created paradigm of authoritar­ian capitalism. With its Belt and Road infrastruc­ture initiative involving more than 150 countries, China is playing the long game and believes it is creating a new economic model that can be an alternativ­e to what it sees as an archaic USled system.

Analysts increasing­ly assert that any forward momentum in trade talks will involve China agreeing to buy more agricultur­al products in return for the US holding back on imposing additional tariffs, removing some existing tariffs and easing some of the restrictio­ns on select Chinese firms such as the telecoms giant Huawei. Yet it may be that we have come to a point where a future US-China trade deal will not return their commercial and trading relationsh­ip to the vigorous level of the past 25+ years. Amid the current trade war, confidence among investors has eroded, hearts have hardened and supply chains have been rerouted, making a return to the prior era of energetic trading unlikely for the time being.

At the same time, if a trade agreement is not reached there will not likely be a marked difference in the current arrangemen­t of tariffs being imposed on both countries. A possible benefit to this arrangemen­t is that markets now have experience operating amid the trade war and have factored this new reality into their decision making and operations, possibly limiting and containing the risk of economic fallout.

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