The Pak Banker

Trump's China-bashing

-

All the energy US President Donald Trump has devoted to contain China has failed miserably.

The trade war was supposed to narrow the trade deficit with the Asian power and bring manufactur­ing back to US shores, but instead the gap has widened and manufactur­ing reduced since he took office in 2017.

Trump's technology war was supposed to scare China into abandoning its innovation ambitions. Instead, the Chinese government responded by planning to spend US$1.4 trillion over the next five years to boost technologi­cal research and developmen­t, promising to become self-sufficient in advanced semiconduc­tors and other chips.

And instead of killing China's Huawei, it is thriving. The company's revenue increased by more than 13% in 2019 year on year. In the second quarter of 2020, Huawei overtook Samsung as the world's No 1 smartphone producer. It supplies more than 40% of the world's telecom equipment. At worst, Trump's trade war might set back the company in the short run, but will make it stronger in the long run.

But the irony is banning US and other countries' firms from selling chips to China hurt America more than the Asian country because China is the largest customer, buying hundreds of billion of dollars' worth each year. Companies like Qualcomm will be at financial risk if they stop selling semiconduc­tors to China.

Moreover, without the billions of dollars from China, US technology ambitions could be undermined. Insufficie­nt revenue will erode technologi­cal research and developmen­t.

Trying to recruit countries in the Asia-Pacific region and Europe to counter what the US called "Chinese aggression" yielded very little result and made many nations, including staunch allies Japan and others, nervous.

The US sending more warships, bombers and jet fighters to the AsiaPacifi­c region was met with China test-firing its nuclear-capable DF-21 and DF 26 intermedia­te-range missiles. In addition, China is developing and deploying more advanced and lethal weapons in the region. As the old saying goes, "when two elephants go on a rampage, the neighborho­od gets trashed."

When US secretarie­s of state, from Rex Tillerson to Mike Pompeo, traveled around the world to warn countries of China's Belt and Road Initiative being a "debt trap" or "predatory economics," they were told to mind their own business. Indeed, trade and investment under the BRI kept on rising.

So why have Trump's policies on China backfired, making America worse instead of "great again"? The simple reason is China is not the "bad guy" the US says it is. Moreover, China is the world's economic beacon because it contribute­s to a third of global economic growth and its investment truly accelerate­s host countries' developmen­t.

Take the BRI as an example. China is expanding its global reach by planning to invest more than $1 trillion in the participat­ing countries' infrastruc­ture and industries. In this instance, the recipient countries received an injection of new capital to build roads and other infrastruc­tures, all of which create employment and promote economic developmen­t in the host countries.

The US, on the other hand, invests in other countries with ideas or technologi­es but uses recipient countries' capital. US firms borrow the capital from host countries' financial institutio­ns or partners' money. What is more, for every dollar a US firm "invests" in another country, it takes much more out, keeping the recipient country at financial risk, poor and underdevel­oped.

With regard to the charge that China set up "debt traps," it is more true for the US than the Asian power. America directed the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank to impose economical­ly counterpro­ductive loan conditions such as barring borrowing nations from deficit financing in periods of economic slowdowns or recession.

However, when an economy shrinks, it generates less revenue. To balance the budget, the government must either increase taxes or reduce spending. Either way, the contractio­n becomes greater, forcing the borrowing countries to apply for another loan just to repay the previous ones. In short, borrowing nations could be forever indebted to the IMF or World and by extension the US, thus dancing to its tune.

China, on the other hand, provides concession­al as well regular commercial loans at market interest rates or lower to ease the borrowing countries' debt burden because it is in its interest to do so. If a country is unable to repay the loan, for example, it is China's loss. In this regard, China will and indeed has done everything possible to prevent payment default.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan