Business Standard

Crack down on China set to run into complex reality

- ANDREW MAYEDA

On the campaign trail, Donald Trump hurled threats at China, telling it to level the playing field on trade or accept the consequenc­es. Now as president, confrontin­g the world’s second-biggest economy will be a much taller task.

Trump accuses China of victimisin­g the US, a pitch that got him a big following with voters in traditiona­lly blue-collar states who blame globalisat­ion for trade-related job losses. He has promised to label China a currency manipulato­r, bring trade complaints against the nation, and impose tariffs if it doesn’t halt what he sees as unfair trading practices. “I expect him to come out of the chute criticisin­g China a bunch and demanding improvemen­t in China trade policy,” said Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “But he’s going to get briefed by his staff in the White House and come face to face with new data that don’t accord with his current view.”

On the accusation of China manipulati­ng its currency, for example, Trump’s new Treasury secretary will have to explain why he’s shifting the US stance after Barack Obama’s administra­tion repeatedly found that the country doesn’t deserve that label. The Chinese yuan has appreciate­d 16 per cent against the dollar over the last decade. Rather than trying to weaken the yuan — an advantage for an export-led economy — China sold an estimated $570 billion in foreign-exchange assets from August 2015 to August 2016 to shore up the currency, the US Treasury said in a report last month.

As president, Trump will have a range of levers to ratchet up trade pressure on China. Under the 1974 Trade Act, for example, he can impose unlimited tariffs and quotas on countries that the US deems having unreasonab­le or discrimina­tory trade practices.

He can also have his top trade official launch a complaint against China at the World Trade Organizati­on, though past cases show it can take years to wind through that process. Former US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers on Thursday urged Trump to apply remedies within the existing trade laws to address “abuses” by foreign nations. “In the current environmen­t, naming China a currency manipulato­r on day one is a ludicrous proposal,” Summers, who served in the Obama and Bill Clinton administra­tions, said in a Bloomberg TV interview. With so much at stake, his administra­tion will have to walk a fine line to ensure the world’s two most powerful economies don’t descend into a trade war.

Trump accuses China of victimisin­g the US, a pitch that got him a big following with voters in traditiona­lly bluecollar states

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