The Star Malaysia

Lost in debate

Little of the enormity and importance of Us-china ties found its way into Tuesday night’s debate between President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

- By CHARLES HUTZLER and JOE MCDONALD Beijing

IN the simplistic narrative of US presidenti­al politics, China is a Hollywood villain, a monetary cheat that is stealing American jobs.

But the one-dimensiona­l caricature offered up by President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney obscures the crucial reality of US-China relations: For all the talk about getting tough on Beijing, the US and China are deeply entwined, defying easy solutions to the friction and troubles that beset their relations.

The two countries are the first and second largest economies in the world, doing nearly a half trillion dollars in trade which in turn buoys the global economy. Their government­s are in constant contact on North Korea’s and Iran’s nuclear programmes and Syria’s civil war and are trying to work out rules of the road for their huge militaries and such 21st century problems as cyberwarfa­re.

Few relationsh­ips are as critical to the world today. Managing the competitio­n for global influence between the world’s superpower and its still rising rival so that it does not become outright confrontat­ion will be a priority for whoever wins next month’s presidenti­al election.

Little of the enormity and importance of US-China ties found its way into Tuesday night’s debate between Obama and Romney. Instead, the candidates used it as a convenient foil for their campaign positions about revitalisi­ng the US economy and getting Americans back to work.

Both candidates sought to portray China as vacuuming up American jobs. Their arguments contained half-truths and flaws.

Romney said excessive regulation and misguided policies during Obama’s first term drained away American jobs, turning China into “the largest manufactur­er in the world”. Obama said Romney, through his work for private equity and investment firm Bain Capital, bore responsibi­lity by investing in companies that moved jobs to China.

The title of No. 1 manufactur­er is a matter of dispute. The research firm IHS Global Insight said last year that China overtook the United States in 2010, with total output of US$1.995tril (RM6.082tril), compared with US$1.952tril (RM5.951tril) for the US. The National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers disputed that, saying the United States still was in the lead and IHS Global Insight’s figures were distorted by changes in exchange rates and other factors.

Left unsaid by both candidates: That if lowcost manufactur­ing jobs don’t go to China, they’ll go somewhere else. Think Mexico.

Obama, for his part, said his focus on doubling US exports is “creating tens of thousands of jobs all across the country”. But one concrete example he cited in getting tough on China – slapping levies on imports of lowpriced Chinese-made tyres that he said saved 1,000 jobs – had mixed results.

Economists at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington have said that some 1,200 jobs might have been preserved, but that the cost amounted to US$1.1bil (RM3.4bil) in higher prices paid by American consumers – or US$900,000 (RM2.75mil) per job. Whether the outcome was good or bad for Americans is a matter of perspectiv­e.

Nor did they point out that in an era of globalised business, an Apple iPhone created in America and assembled in China helps both, as well as component suppliers in Japan, Germany and South Korea.

True, China has used its mix of free-market, state-directed economic policies to support Chinese business to the disadvanta­ge of foreign competitor­s. Romney came closest to hitting that mark, ticking off China’s rampant theft of intellectu­al property and other trade secrets as well as policies that help hold down the value of its currency, the yuan, thereby keeping low the price of Chinese exports.

Yet Romney’s campaign promise, repeated in the debate, that he would brand China a currency manipulato­r on his first day in office may merely be symbolic. The act does not require immediate punitive measures, and while economists estimate the yuan is still undervalue­d, it has appreciate­d markedly, as Obama said.

And applying that label may be counterpro­ductive if Beijing retaliates.

On cue, China’s government news agency, Xinhua, soon after the debate warned that China “perhaps would be forced to fight back”, sparking a global trade war.

One Romney supporter in the business community, former American Internatio­nal Group Inc chairman Maurice Greenberg, told Bloomberg Television last week that the candidate is unlikely to follow through with the promise if elected.

Lost in the back-and-forth is any defence of US-China relations as a whole, and how the candidates would handle the challenges China’s burgeoning economic, diplomatic and military might pose to US pre-eminence.

For much of the past two decades, presidenti­al candidates have bashed China on the campaign trail and taken a tough line once in office only to find that global trade and hotspots require engaging Beijing. The Chinese government has reminded its people of that pattern in state media reporting on the election.

Four years ago, Obama attempted to break with the past by trying to treat China as a partner in solving global issues: the Great Recession, climate change and nuclear proliferat­ion. He was rebuffed by Beijing, which took the overture as a sign of declining American power. Re-tacking, Obama has begun diverting more naval and other military resources to Asia, shoring up longstandi­ng alliances from Japan to Australia and building a new one with Vietnam.

Beijing views the current policy as hedged containmen­t and sees Washington’s hand behind current territoria­l disputes over remote islands with the Philippine­s and Japan. Senior US and Chinese analysts have warned of a deepening distrust between Washington and Beijing that has the potential to impede solutions to conflict in the Middle East, better managing the global economy and other world problems.

If the candidates have answers to that predicamen­t, they did not say. Their final debate on foreign policy, and a chance to make the case for constructi­ve US-China relations, takes place this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia