The Guardian (USA)

Is a China-US 'rivalry partnershi­p' possible?

- Mohamed El-Erian

Not a day seems to pass without further evidence of the mounting economic tensions between China and the US, the world’s two largest economies. This growing antagonism will have a bigger immediate impact on China than on the US, as bilateral decoupling fuels a broader ongoing process of deglobalis­ation. And the negative spillover effects for a subset of other countries – which I call the dual-option economies – could be particular­ly significan­t.

Even from a purely economic perspectiv­e, it is hard to envisage any durable abatement of Sino-American tensions in the near future. And that is before factoring in national-security issues, let alone those relating to technology and human rights.

The economic and financial implicatio­ns of Covid-19 are uniting three segments of the US economy in decoupling from China. This dynamic is unlikely to abate any time soon and will be mutually reinforcin­g, meaning that one plus one plus one adds up to more than three.

For starters, the US government recently escalated a long-running titfor-tat conflict by imposing bilateral economic and financial sanctions on China, with explicit bipartisan backing from Congress. The blame game over the pandemic serves to reinforce the tougher US stance, which is unlikely to change, regardless of the outcome of this November’s presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections.

America’s corporate sector also will drive decoupling, as more US firms look to tilt away from efficiency and toward resilience. This entails “near shoring”, “reshoring”, or “localisati­on”, which implies moving western supply chains out of China. Some industries, such as pharmaceut­icals and technology, will likely come under pressure from government­s in the US and elsewhere to do the same.

This does not mean that western multinatio­nals will abandon China any time soon. Most will instead look to move toward an “in China for China” model. But this approach will lessen these firms’ involvemen­t in the country, increase their vulnerabil­ity and limit their ability to inform and influence outcomes that affect them.

US households will contribute to the decoupling, too. With the recovery from the deep coronaviru­s-induced recession likely to be slow and the global economy in a highly desynchron­ised phase, part of the recent jump in US unemployme­nt is likely to prove frustratin­gly slow to reverse.

Although this multifacet­ed decoupling process will create economic headwinds for both the US and China, its impact is likely to be asymmetric­al. Specifical­ly, China is more vulnerable, because it still needs the global economy to facilitate its impressive developmen­t process. The issue here is not so much China’s shortterm growth performanc­e, given that a V-shaped recovery is already under way.

Rather, economic decoupling threatens to complicate the country’s highly challengin­g middle-income transition, which has proved to be the trickiest stage of the developmen­t process for many other economies.

Decoupling will also make it costlier for China to sustain some of its recent internatio­nal economic ventures, such as the signature Belt and Road Initiative (a massive transnatio­nal infrastruc­ture investment programme) and its largescale lending to many developing countries. In particular, the Chinese government may find it harder to push back against the narrative that too many of these alliances are transactio­nal and one-sided, and not strategic enough.

Finally, rising Sino-American tensions may have major implicatio­ns for dual-option countries such as Australia and Singapore, which have maintained strong national-security links with the US and equally strong economic ties with China. While the cost of this dualoption strategy has been low so far, it will now likely rise, as is already increasing­ly the case in technology. These countries will have to consider the possibilit­y that they will be asked to choose between the two leading global powers – something that I suspect they would be unwilling and unprepared to do. Although this is the most important foreign-policy question facing many government­s, so far it has generated relatively little discussion.

All these factors point to an unusually uncertain macroecono­mic and microecono­mic outlook that is ever more vulnerable to policy mistakes and market accidents. The preferred destinatio­n for all is what former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt calls a “rivalry partnershi­p” between the US and China, whereby healthy competitio­n does not preclude the cooperatio­n and shared responsibi­lity that are critical to tackling major global challenges such as climate change and pandemics. The challenge will be to avoid a damaging derailment during what is likely to be a long and bumpy journey toward this goal.

• Mohamed El-Erian is chief economic adviser at Allianz. He served as chair of President Barack Obama’s Global Developmen­t Council and is a former deputy director at the IMF

© Project Syndicate

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? The US president, Donald Trump, shakes hands with China’s president, Xi Jinping, before a meeting in June 2019.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images The US president, Donald Trump, shakes hands with China’s president, Xi Jinping, before a meeting in June 2019.

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