Daily Times (Primos, PA)

China tries to hid illegal trade practices in face of tariffs

- By Jeff Ferry Times Guest Columnist

As President Trump imposes new tariffs on Chinese exports, Beijing is countering with a public relations offensive. In a recent “white paper,” China’s State Council argued that any trade dispute is entirely the fault of the US. Beijing claims that it absolutely plays by the rules of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO), and doesn’t hack other nations’ intellectu­al property.

One shouldn’t expect less of China’s autocratic regime. After racking up trillions of dollars in trade surpluses with the United States over the past few decades, it would indeed be surprising if Beijing admitted to any faults, or chose to abandon its winning strategy.

But facts are stubborn things. When China joined the WTO in 2001, it promised to move to a market economy and to compete on a free-market basis with advanced nations. President Bill Clinton promoted China’s WTO accession, saying it would make them “more like us.”

That never happened. The Coalition for a Prosperous America (CPA) has identified many instances where China is supporting and protecting its own industries with government subsidies and preferenti­al treatment. And as researcher­s Usha and George Haley have documented, China took entry into the WTO as the beginning of an opportunit­y for “aggressive­ly subsidizin­g targeted industries in order to dominate global markets.” The Haleys found $27 billion in energy subsidies that China’s steel industry received between 2000 and 2007, making it the world’s number one steel producer. Similarly, China’s paper industry received $33 billion in government subsidies.

Such massive subsidies vastly expanded China’s economy. And while US consumers often assume that China’s manufactur­ing advantage comes from cheap labor, the Haleys found that labor amounted to “between 2% and 7% of production costs” for such key industries as solar, steel, glass, paper, and auto parts. Yet China routinely sold such goods for “25% to 30% less than those from the US or the European Union,” thanks to industrial subsidies, a currency manipulate­d to below-market levels, and import controls.

All of this flies in the face of China’s WTO obligation­s, with Beijing having promised to halt the deliberati­on undervalua­tion of its currency. Similarly, the multi-billion dollar subsidies that Beijing doles out to its state-owned enterprise­s remain actionable under WTO rules.

Essentiall­y, the Chinese government chose to specialize in what they believed would make China a superpower, and they’ve shown remarkable success in transformi­ng a desperatel­y poor, backward dictatorsh­ip into the world’s number two economic power.

None of this is acknowledg­ed

in China’s recent white paper,however.NordoesChi­na admit to hacking, intellectu­al property theft, or forced technology transfer.

American multinatio­nal companies often voluntaril­y enter into agreements to set up joint ventures in China. But the price of doing business is the transfer of technology to Chinese “partners.” Such deals provide only short-term benefit before China has sucked out all the relevant technology—and begins favoring its own suppliers. The European Chamber of Commerce in China has become increasing­ly concerned about this coerced technology transfer, stating: “foreign companies are often pushed to transfer technology as the price of market entry, which is in contravent­ion of [China’s] commitment­s as a member of the World Trade Organizati­on.”

Finally, there are China’s illegal forms of technology transfer,

including industrial espionage, reverse engineerin­g, and evasion of US export control laws. A June report by the White House identified 27 different techniques by which China’s economic aggression threatens US intellectu­al property. It’s estimated that cyberespio­nage costs US industry an astonishin­g $400 billion a year, with 90 percent originatin­g in China.

China doesn’t appear to have modified its behavior since President Trump took a more aggressive tone on trade. And Beijing’s claims of fair play cannot whitewash such selfservin­g behavior. The US and China are heading towards economic disengagem­ent unless Beijing modifies its behavior. If that happens, China will be the loser.

Jeff Ferry is the Research Director of the Coalition for a Prosperous America (CPA).

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