Texarkana Gazette

Biden: More competitio­n from China

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Pushing for trillions of dollars in developmen­t spending, President Joe Biden and Democratic lawmakers are directing Americans’ eyes to the rear-view mirror, pointing to a booming, ambitious China they say is threatenin­g to quickly overtake the United States in global clout and capacity.

It’s a national security pitch for a domestic spending program: that the $2 trillion proposal for investment­s in U.S. transport and energy, manufactur­ing, internet and other sectors will make the United States more competitiv­e in the face of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s massive infrastruc­ture-building campaign.

The argument is that competitio­n today with China is more about economic and technologi­cal gains than arms — and its outcome will impact the United States’ financial growth and influence, its ability to defend U.S. security alliances and interests abroad, and the daily lives of Americans.

China under Xi has “an overall goal to become the leading country in the world, the wealthiest country in the world, and the most powerful country in the world,” Biden said before launching his proposal last week. “That’s not going to happen on my watch because the United States are going to continue to grow and expand.”

That pitch hasn’t won over Republican­s. They say his proposal has been loaded down with unnecessar­y spending projects and that raising taxes will ultimately hurt the U.S. economy.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said Republican­s could support a “much more modest” approach, one that doesn’t rely on corporate tax hikes to pay for it. Biden’s plan is “something we’re not going to do,” McConnell said Monday.

To varying degrees, addressing infrastruc­ture has bipartisan support. Americans are experienci­ng outages, delays and irritation­s on transport and power systems designed in the 1960s and earlier. Meanwhile, China’s latest five-year plan calls for hundreds more airports, coalfired power plants and other standard infrastruc­ture projects. Xi also is calling for his country’s focus on “new infrastruc­ture,” including investment in 5G networks and other digital infrastruc­ture.

“Time and momentum are on our side,” Xi told a meeting of the Communist Party last year.

China spends more on infrastruc­ture projects in other countries than the United States spends at home, said Jonathan Hillman, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. That and China’s long-running economic boom, fueled in part by its domestic infrastruc­ture spending, are helping China become more influentia­l internatio­nally, and may give it more confidence as it makes claims over Taiwan and other contested territory or advances its interests, some argue.

Using urgent warnings of a rival’s advances to press for more infrastruc­ture and research spending is a Cold War-tested technique. Past American presidents pointed to the Soviet Union while building up the U.S. highway system, space program and arms stockpiles.

And in the case of infrastruc­ture, Biden’s repeated warnings that China and other countries are “eating our lunch” are borne out by many crucial metrics, and by the observatio­ns of anyone who’s traveled abroad much.

“Almost every day” in the U.S., service providers somewhere announce “the power is out, the wi-fi is out,” said Min Ye, a researcher at Boston University whose work focuses on China and the intersecti­on of economics and security.

Pointing to her two decades living in the Boston area, Ye says she has seen no really big upgrades to tired local road networks, no bus route upgrades that would help her get into the city more easily, no rail upkeep that would make a train trip to New York to see friends more enticing.

While Ye was glad to see Boston Logan Internatio­nal Airport launch projects to spiff up its interior and parking, it’s been more than a quarter-century since the United States last built a new major airport, in Denver. Academic studies and economists claim the lost hours of delays in the air and on roads and rails cost billions of dollars in lost productivi­ty.

And the federal government estimates 18 million Americans lack internet. What internet there is is expensive, compared to that of other big economies. It all led to scenes of U.S. workers and schoolchil­dren sitting in fast-food parking lots to do their work online this year as the pandemic shut down offices and schools.

Research done for the Group of 20 rich and developing nations estimates China’s infrastruc­ture spending as a percentage of domestic production on track to be more than three times that of the United States.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States