Bangkok Post

Trump is underestim­ating China’s resolve on trade

US president’s tariffs likely to see Beijing dig heels in rather than offer up concession­s, writes Michael Schuman

- Michael Schuman is a journalist based in Beijing and author of ‘Confucius: And the World He Created’.

Donald Trump’s strategy in his trade war with China boils down to inflicting sufficient economic pain to eventually force Beijing’s leaders to make the concession­s the president wants — whatever those may be. That’s the obvious purpose of the tariffs he plans to impose on another US$200 billion of Chinese-made goods.

Mr Trump may find with China, though, that there’s an inverse relationsh­ip between pressure and cooperatio­n. Rather than bringing China’s leadership to heel, the extra duties are likely to prompt a digging in of heels. That means a longer trade war, with greater damage to the US economy.

The latest moves may be not much more than optics, a reality show before mid-term elections to make Mr Trump appear tough. But the approach is also mired in mispercept­ions — and bluntly, plain ignorance — of modern China. To Mr Trump and his advisers, that nation appears poor, dependent on the US and susceptibl­e to coercion. The reality is a global economic force with a proud and ambitious leadership that bases its legitimacy on restoring Chinese power. Those leaders will not be easily intimidate­d.

Team Trump’s first big miscalcula­tion is over economic leverage. Because China exports more to the US than vice versa, the administra­tion reckons it has the upper hand. Stephen Moore, a Heritage Foundation fellow and former Trump economic adviser, recently said of China that “their economy cannot grow without access to the US market”.

The facts suggest otherwise. China is now a $12 trillion economy, and far from vulnerable. Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics Ltd, said in a July 11 report that the total $250 billion of exports facing US tariffs represents only 1.3% of the country’s GDP, and the damage done by those duties might be only around 0.5% of output. That’s not pocket change, but it’s almost certainly insufficie­nt to compel Beijing to grovel.

Nor does Mr Trump appreciate whom his tariffs really hurt. He’s assuming Chinese companies and workers will bear the brunt, but that ignores global supply chains. Hannah Anderson, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, commented recently that “the majority of the value in the imports from China the US has imposed tariffs on so far comes from other countries besides China”.

Where the US administra­tion misunderst­ands China most strikingly is in politics. Certainly, President Xi Jinping is an unelected strongman, and possibly president for life, who theoretica­lly can pursue any policy he likes. But China doesn’t work that way. Mr Xi, like Mr Trump, has a public image to uphold; that image, like Mr Trump’s, is wrapped up in nationalis­m.

Mr Xi relentless­ly portrays himself in state media as the stoic defender of the Chinese people, the man to restore the nation to its rightful place on the world stage — to Make China Great Again, you might say.

This bravado has a ready-made audience. Chinese media constantly remind the public of a litany of past humiliatio­ns at the hands of Western powers and their allies, especially Japan — the unjust wars and unequal treaties that turned a hegemon into the poor prey of gunboat diplomacy.

In speech after speech, Mr Xi himself

Mr Trump may find with China, though, that there’s an inverse relationsh­ip between pressure and cooperatio­n.

reminds his people of aggression against China and the determinat­ion of the Communist Party to right those wrongs. “The Chinese people have made continuous efforts for more than 170 years to fulfil the great dreams,” he told deputies at a March congress. “Today, we are closer, more confident, and more capable than ever before.”

The government’s message is clear: China will no longer be a victim. As with global politics, so with trade. For example, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs characteri­sed the latest tariffs as “quintessen­tial trade bullying” and promised China would “stand on the right side of history”.

This state-fostered fervour makes it almost impossible for Mr Xi to be seen to cave in to Mr Trump.

Eventually, the two sides will have to find an accommodat­ion that allows both to claim victory. In the meantime, the tariffs will punish US consumers and companies with higher prices, costing jobs, profits and growth, while making a face-saving compromise harder to reach.

Mr Trump and his advisers appear to be undaunted. But they can’t defeat a foe they fail to understand.

 ?? REUTERS ?? US President Donald Trump, right, welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping in Florida in April last year.
REUTERS US President Donald Trump, right, welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping in Florida in April last year.

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