China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China committed to upholding global stability

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China is working to steel its economy from a hostile external environmen­t, as it engineers a transition to a more innovative, inclusive and sustainabl­e growth model. To advance this effort, China’s leaders are engaging the private sector, which, as Vice-Premier Liu He recently acknowledg­ed, accounts for more than 50 percent of tax revenues, 60 percent of GDP, 70 percent of technologi­cal innovation, 80 percent of urban employment, and 90 percent of new jobs and companies.

China’s leaders finally seem to have recognized that unless the country ends up in a full-blown war that threatens its national security, they have little reason to continue to subsidize State-owned enterprise­s at the expense of private companies.

In terms of limiting the potential for further instabilit­y, China’s approach makes sense. The problem is that for many countries, domestic concerns — think of Brexit — are increasing­ly at odds with global imperative­s.

After decades of globalizat­ion and technologi­cal progress, countries today are more interconne­cted than ever, with policy decisions made in one country having farreachin­g spillover effects in other countries, even the world. In this context, no one country can address key challenges such as climate change, rising inequality and disruptive technology in isolation from others. Yet just when the world needs cooperatio­n the most, the United States has largely withdrawn from the internatio­nal stage.

To be sure, even if the US were exercising more global leadership, the ongoing shift from a unipolar to a multipolar world order would still proceed. This trend is being driven partly by demographi­cs: developed countries are aging fast, while Asia, Africa, and Latin America have burgeoning population­s that are both young and increasing­ly wealthy, implying both substantia­l dynamism and greater competitio­n for resources.

But the Donald Trump administra­tion’s penchant for antagonism, protection­ism and short-term gains has made matters much worse. For example, tax cuts for corporatio­ns and the wealthy not only exacerbate inequality at home, but also fuel a global race to the bottom that undermines fiscal sustainabi­lity and increases inequality worldwide.

Similarly, while it is understand­able that the US does not want to foot the bill for its allies’ security, Trump’s ham-fisted approach to pushing America’s NATO allies to increase their defense spending is not helping. On the contrary, beyond weakening relations with the US’ closest allies, Trump’s tactics have heightened tensions with Russia, thereby increasing what economists call the “shadow price” of national security.

Then, of course, there are the Trump administra­tion’s trade policies, which will do much more than “punish” China. The case for liberaliza­tion has always focused on reducing the transactio­n costs of global trade, investment and informatio­n flows. By blocking Chinese access to technology, under the guise of national security, the Trump administra­tion increases these costs, not just for China, but also for other countries trying to use trade and technology to advance their growth and developmen­t.

The Trump administra­tion’s erratic use of sanctions compounds the problem by making it difficult to price transactio­ns with countries that could be friends one day but deemed enemies the next. When the US unilateral­ly decided to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and re-impose sanctions on Teheran, the European Union suddenly faced new barriers to trade with Iran. The EU must now attempt to circumvent US sanctions by establishi­ng a “special payments system” with China and Russia.

So, after decades of increasing openness and globalizat­ion, the world is retreating into fragmentat­ion. This will severely weaken global trade, thereby underminin­g economies’ growth prospects while preventing the world from confrontin­g shared challenges. In fact, it could even exacerbate those challenges: for example, the ecological destructio­n and resource scarcity brought about by climate change is likely to fuel conflict and instabilit­y, spurring ever-more migration.

Trump may think that his approach to China amounts to putting “America first”. Yet his policies will hurt not just China, but also the US, not to mention the rest of the world. The only way to avoid a universall­y damaging outcome is to change course, restoring mutually beneficial cooperatio­n with China, which has published a white paper in support of precisely that outcome.

China’s leaders recognize that, after decades of globalizat­ion, countries are too deeply intertwine­d, through both supply chains and knowledge networks, to go it alone. They also know that it is in China’s best interest not to try. Instead, they hope to continue to deepen their linkages with the internatio­nal community, acting not as a disruptor, but as a responsibl­e stakeholde­r committed to upholding global stability. The US should do the same.

Trump may think ... his approach to China amounts to putting “America first”. Yet his policies will hurt not just China, but also the US, not to mention the rest of the world.

Andrew Sheng is a distinguis­hed fellow at the Asia Global Institute, University of Hong Kong, and a member of the UNEP Advisory Council on Sustainabl­e Finance. And Xiao Geng, president of the Hong Kong Institutio­n for Internatio­nal Finance, is a professor at Peking University HSBC Business School and the University of Hong Kong’s Faculty of Business and Economics. Project Syndicate

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