Boston Herald

Trump’s moves misfire as China wages trade war

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of National Review. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@ bostonhera­ld.com.

There’s already a trade war, and it’s being waged by Beijing.

China’s ascension to the World Trade Organizati­on nearly 20 years ago has failed in its large-scale strategic objectives. It hasn’t created a liberalizi­ng regime or a free-market economy in China; in fact, it hasn’t even created a China ready and willing to abide by the norms of free trade.

The regime of Xi Jinping hasn’t been pushed toward democratic reforms by a rising middle class. China still champions state-led, rather than market-led, capitalism. And it takes advantage of the WTO, using nontariff barriers and industrial policy, to push mercantili­st policies.

President Trump’s prospectiv­e tariffs on steel and aluminum have put renewed focus on China trade, although the tariffs are a comically inept misfire if their true target is China. The rubric for the levies could be: “How to lose a trade war with China in one easy step.”

The tariffs don’t really affect China, from which we import less than 3 percent of our steel. Meanwhile, they send the message that the U.S. government is lurching toward protection­ism, and alienate our allies. They run exactly counter to what would be a sound approach to Chinese mercantili­sm, as a compelling report by the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation underscore­s.

The report argues that there are two ways to wave the white flag on China trade — one, favored by the Washington establishm­ent, is to accept Chinese cheating as the way of the world; the other, perhaps favored by Trump, is to adopt a mercantili­sm of our own. Both would concede to the Chinese an outsize role in forging new, less desirable rules of the road in the global trading system and poorly serve America’s interests.

A better approach begins with acknowledg­ing that China is a unique problem. For all of Trump’s complaints, Mexico isn’t pursuing a well-honed strategic agenda of exploiting the global trade system at the same time it undertakes an aggressive neoimperia­list foreign policy. Only China is doing that.

China isn’t the first developing country to adopt a policy of maximizing exports. What makes it different is its sheer ambition and its size, which gives it leverage over foreign companies and considerab­le internatio­nal influence.

What’s the harm to the U.S.? Yes, technology accounts for a large share of job losses in manufactur­ing in recent decades. Yes, lowerend manufactur­ing would have left our shores regardless. But there is no doubt that China’s practices have harmed the U.S. manufactur­ing sector, and that Beijing works to block higher-valueadded exports from the U.S. and is pursuing a comprehens­ive strategy to dominate in advanced industries.

By no means should we emulate China. We should continue to pursue free trade as a policy, not as a theology that prevents us from acknowledg­ing that there is such a thing as unfair trade.

The ITIF report urges using the global free-trade regime against China. That means bringing more actions against China in the WTO and working to update the rules to capture Chinese cheating. It means joining, and influencin­g, a multilater­al agreement like the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p. It means forging bilateral agreements with up-to-date standards that reinforce principles that China undermines.

We obviously can’t do this alone. We’d have to lead an alliance of internatio­nal partners to pressure China on specific practices, with tailored consequenc­es if we get nowhere.

Such a broad-based effort to crack China’s mercantili­sm wouldn’t be protection­ist, but the opposite. There is obviously no chance of doing this, though, if we are engaged in an absurd cycle of tit-for-tat tariffs with the likes of the EU.

Trump can have emotionall­y satisfying tariffs to scratch his protection­ist itch, or he can have a strategy to muster an alliance of truly free-trade partners to pressure China. He can’t have both — and you can be sure China knows which option it prefers.

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