The Sentinel-Record

China could target U.S. firms, debt

- JOE MCDONALD

BEIJING — In a looming trade war between the world’s two largest economies, American companies in China may have a bull’s-eye on their backs.

The Trump administra­tion is pushing China to cut its trade surplus with the United States by $200 billion by the end of 2020 and give up policies that favor domestic companies — the core of Beijing’s state-led economic model.

As the two sides exchange threats of tariff hikes, their lopsided trade balance means China will run out of imports for retaliatio­n before President Donald Trump does.

But Beijing has other ways to inflict pain. Chief among those is harassing American companies that make autos, operate restaurant chains, sell computer software and do other business in China’s heavily regulated economy.

Other possible options include selling U.S. government debt or disrupting diplomatic efforts over North Korea, but those would damage Beijing’s own interests.

Trump has threatened higher tariffs on $150 billion of Chinese goods in response to complaints Beijing violates its free-trade commitment­s by stealing or pressuring foreign companies to hand over technology.

Beijing reacted to his first round with a $50 billion list including American aircraft, soybeans and pork for possible retaliatio­n. If it raises that to match Trump’s total, that would be nearly equal to China’s 2017 imports of U.S. goods.

The Commerce Ministry has warned that no option is off the table.

TARGET COMPANIES

Chinese regulators have wide discretion and an arsenal of tools to disrupt U.S. businesses from withholdin­g licenses to launching tax, anti-monopoly or other investigat­ions.

The U.S. chipmaker Qualcomm Inc. might serve as an early example. China is the final major government withholdin­g approval of Qualcomm’s proposal for its $44 billion acquisitio­n of rival NXP Semiconduc­tors.

In April, the Commerce Ministry said Qualcomm’s proposal “has difficulty” resolving concerns of Chinese anti-monopoly regulators. Qualcomm and NXP said April 19 that at the Chinese ministry’s request, the companies withdrew and refiled an applicatio­n for Beijing to clear the acquisitio­n.

China’s entirely state-controlled media have encouraged consumer boycotts against Japanese, South Korean and other products during previous disputes with those government­s.

“China can harm the interests of the United States by limiting the operations of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns,” said Jin Canrong, a foreign relations specialist at Beijing’s Renmin University, in comments to the website wallstreet­cn.com.

Jin pointed to the example of South Korean retailer Lotte, whose business was destroyed by Beijing last year after it sold land to the Seoul government for an anti-missile system opposed by Chinese leaders.

Beijing retaliated by closing most of Lotte’s 99 supermarke­ts and other outlets in China. Seoul and Beijing later mended relations, but South Korean news reports said Lotte has given up on China and is trying to sell its stores.

“Already we are hearing that approvals for some types of licenses for U.S. firms operating are being put on hold,” the Eurasia Group said in a report.

FINANCIAL LEVERAGE

Chinese commentato­rs say Beijing has financial weapons, though using them would cost China’s own economy and internatio­nal standing.

Nationalis­ts point to China’s $1.2 trillion holdings of U.S. government debt as leverage. But Beijing would suffer losses if it sold enough of that to influence U.S. debt financing costs. And there are few other places to store such vast foreign currency reserves.

Beijing also could obstruct U.S. investment in China, wrote commentato­r Ren Zeping on money.163.com. But that also would impose a cost by worsening an investment slump Chinese leaders are trying to reverse.

Regulators could depress the state-controlled exchange rate for China’s yuan against the dollar. That could help Chinese exporters and make U.S. imports more expensive. But it would carry a political cost by hurting other trading partners and making Beijing look reckless, possibly destabiliz­ing financial markets.

DIPLOMATIC PRESSURE

Beijing can appeal for support to U.S. allies that are miffed by Trump’s “America first” approach and the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate pact and the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a regional trade agreement.

Trump’s unilateral actions have allowed China, the mostclosed major economy, to position itself as a defender of free trade.

That could help Beijing win over government­s that have criticized Trump for acting outside the World Trade Organizati­on.

China is a “central pillar” of the global trading system, “and we want to fully cooperate with China,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said during a visit to Beijing last month.

Beijing also has potential support from American companies and business groups that have criticized Trump and favor globalizat­ion.

More broadly, Chinese commentato­rs have suggested Beijing also could disrupt diplomatic work over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs or other initiative­s. But analysts say that would risk setting back work Chinese leaders see as a priority.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? BEIJING: A woman tends to a child near a promotiona­l gimmick in the form of a bomb and the U.S. flag on April 12 outside a U.S. apparel shop in Beijing. China’s lopsided trade balance with the United States means it will run out of imports for...
The Associated Press BEIJING: A woman tends to a child near a promotiona­l gimmick in the form of a bomb and the U.S. flag on April 12 outside a U.S. apparel shop in Beijing. China’s lopsided trade balance with the United States means it will run out of imports for...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States