Bangkok Post

China is playing Trump on trade

- David Fickling ©2019 BLOOMBERG OPINION David Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering commoditie­s, as well as industrial and consumer companies.

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Chinese agricultur­al firms will wait to see how trade talks progress before resuming purchases from the US.

The logic behind China’s decision to ask its state-owned enterprise­s to halt imports of US farm goods would, at one level, seem blindingly obvious. Leaders in Beijing may have a more complex game in mind, though.

After US President Donald Trump last week threatened to impose tariffs on another US$300 billion (about 9.2 trillion baht) of Chinese imports, in large part because China had supposedly reneged on a promise to ramp up agricultur­al purchases, President Xi Jinping could hardly afford to look like he was bending before the pressure. Chinese state agricultur­al firms will wait to see how trade talks progress before resuming purchases from the US, people familiar with the situation said yesterday.

Economical­ly, this was one of the easiest decisions Mr Xi could possibly have made. The fact is that agricultur­al trade between the two nations has been declining since well before Mr Trump launched his trade war. US farm exports

to China peaked all the way back in 2012.

Exclude the wood, paper and pulp industries, where trade has remained fairly constant, and the decline is even more dramatic: The $13.93 billion China imported in 2018 was barely more than half the $25 billion in 2014.

China pointedly isn’t making similar threats over aircraft, machinery, electronic­s, precision equipment and cars. Each accounts for a larger share of imports than farm goods, but are far more difficult to replace using other suppliers.

The de facto ban has the additional benefit of maximising political impact. President Donald Trump has made no secret of the fact that farm trade is close to his heart — hardly surprising, given how important swing states in the Midwest grain belt such as Iowa and Wisconsin were to his 2016 election victory. Chinese agricultur­al purchases were the most well-trailed part of the pact that Mr Trump’s trade negotiator­s were working on before the talks blew up in May and he appears to regard resuming them as more or less a preconditi­on to any further agreement.

Making a show of cutting this particular area of bilateral trade at a time when the American farmer is reeling from the after-effects of this year’s floods is a potent way for Beijing to jab its fingers in Washington’s eyes. Yesterday’s decision to let the yuan weaken past 7 to the dollar should similarly support Chinese exports and worsen the US trade deficit that Mr Trump cares so much about.

The move could be more than a short-term attempt to lash out, however. When negotiatio­ns appeared to be making progress, China was only too happy to hint that it would beef up its farm purchases. But any trade discussion ultimately comes down to a bargain. By withdrawin­g apparent concession­s now, Beijing is creating chips it can trade away again at a future date.

Although China is a relatively slight importer of US farm commoditie­s — behind Canada, Mexico, the European Union and Japan in the already tradewar affected 2018, and only just ahead of South Korea — its potential is still enormous. Removing all barriers could lift the value of US agricultur­al exports to China by $53 billion, twice the size of the $25 billion import trade in 2014 and enough to increase overall overseas purchases from US farms by half, according to a study last year led by Minghao Li of Iowa State University.

That’s quite the carrot. At this point, even if trade talks do resume as scheduled in September, the chances of China agreeing to the kind of long-term structural reforms the US has been demanding appear to be fading. Mr Xi may be betting that Mr Trump, desperate for a win on the campaign trail, will at some point agree to a smaller deal focused primarily on concrete Chinese purchases he can tout.

Opening the cheque book then should be as easy as closing it now.

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