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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (147998)4/26/2019 8:06:13 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217656
 
the cretins who sup at moronic deep-state trough has an answer for every minutia, to ring-fence team china, except one, what about rare earth, as in "if we stop xz&z, what happens if they stop rare earth tomorrow?"

in any case the cretins and morons are settling down to the possibility that Lighthizer shall not deliver up team china as he did Japan, because whilst Japan might be able to say "no", team china does say "no"

in any case, get ready for the trumping victory party, and then onward to 2020 - am guessing trump shall win, as his opponents gobble up each other lobster sashimi style, with the antennae still twitching

asiatimes.com

The Chinese tortoise and the American hare

Beijing and Washington have been engaged in long-standing negotiations to resolve an increasingly contentious trade dispute. It looks like we are approaching the endgame, but, as James Politi and Lucy Hornby report in the Financial Times, “the two sides remain apart on two key issues – the fate of existing US levies on Chinese goods, which Beijing wants to see removed, and the terms of an enforcement mechanism demanded by Washington to ensure that China abides by the deal.”

Assuming we resolve these final issues, what will the ultimate deal look like? Will it rectify lingering structural problems that have devastated US manufacturing (with genuine enforcement provisions)? Or will the deal simply represent yet another faux bargain in which China in essence bribes US officialdom via purchases of some additional soybeans and wide-bodied aircraft to make cosmetic reductions in Beijing’s trade surplus?

There’s no question that a simple restoration of the status quo ante would not constitute a trade win for US President Donald Trump by any stretch. That would be an epitomic case of “ sound and fury, signifying nothing.” At the same time, it would be highly unrealistic to expect Beijing to eliminate its elaborate system of state subsidies for industry, the basis for its state-capitalist growth model, which has accelerated China’s quantum leap up the technology curve.

In this regard, US Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer will play a crucial role in determining the outcome, although questions still linger as to whether he will ultimately be undermined by Trump in the latter’s quest to secure a win at any cost, especially if this “win” comes with the usual pledges to purchase much higher quantities of American goods and nothing else behind it.

By the same token, even if Beijing goes beyond that and pledges to open up more sectors of China’s domestic economy to US investment, tighten laws on intellectual property, etc, such additional promises do not really help American workers (quite the contrary, if it means that companies like General Motors keep shutting down domestic facilities and making increasingly large bets on the Chinese market, as they appear to be doing already). Using Trump’s simplistic metric of success – the actual bilateral trade figures between the United States and China – investing more in China will not reduce America’s trade deficit with Beijing and, indeed, might add to it, as these Chinese-manufactured goods are re-exported back to the American market.

The granting of a “permanent normal trading relationship” (PNTR) and then the subsequent accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001 have been a boon for China, but the persistence of ongoing US trade deficits have led many, including the current president, to judge the United States a loser in ongoing trade negotiations with Beijing. It’s not a totally irrational judgment: China’s WTO accession hasn’t been great for US manufacturers.

Part of the problem stems from the extraordinary fact that Washington has seldom deployed a negotiator who is actually well versed in trade issues. Since the days of Bill Clinton’s administration, it has been the US treasury secretary, as opposed to the country’s chief trade representative, who has consistently directed trade negotiations, with the resultant (and eminently predictable) impact that financial interests have superseded those of any other economic sector.

That pattern was briefly disrupted when president George W Bush appointed Alcoa’s chief executive officer, Paul O’Neill, to head the Treasury, and then CSX president John W Snow, but ultimately the “Wall Street über alles” mentality again prevailed with the appointment of Hank Paulson (to be followed by Tim Geithner, Jack Lew, and now Steve Mnuchin – all of whom have finance-centric backgrounds).

For all of the supposed financial sophistication of America’s Wall Street-based treasury secretaries, it is indeed ironic that China has consistently been able to play them for fools with the implied threat of its so-called “nuclear option,” a highly flawed narrative that alleges that as a final resort, Beijing would dump its huge stockpile of US Treasuries, thereby driving up US interest rates, and creating a catastrophic depression for the US economy. That so-called threat to the bond market is the traditional reason successive treasury secretaries have been hesitant to resort to the blunt-trauma force of trade sanctions or tariffs when it came to negotiating with Beijing. They were also comforted by the idea that as it modernized, China would increasingly abide by traditional norms of free-trade doctrine against all available evidence that shows that it has not played by the same rules.

Let’s leave aside the internal incoherence of the nuclear option: China exiting dollar-denominated assets could well create downward pressure on the external value of the free-floating US currency. But that would enhance US export competitiveness, assuming, of course, that America has anything left to export, an unfortunate legacy of the Treasury’s malign neglect of US manufacturing. It’s also operationally wrong (see here for further detail), and mistakenly assumes (against all historical evidence to the contrary) that Beijing would pursue an economic policy that is the functional equivalent of cutting its own nose to spite its face, as Paul Krugman, among others, notes.

Even if Paulson, Geithner, Lew, Mnuchin, etc didn’t truly believe in the “nuclear option,” they have been happy to tamp down the possibility of a trade war in order to keep the capital markets stable. Each trade “deal” has therefore largely sustained the status quo, the price for which sees Beijing usually offering up a few well-timed purchases of soybeans or Boeing aircraft (although the latter will be more problematic in light of the 737 fiasco). But China’s policymakers have never been forced to deal with the economic consequences of their country’s mercantilism, which has resulted in the steady erosion of America’s Rust Belt, as the US economy gave back the considerable employment gains it achieved during the 1990s, via a historic contraction in manufacturing employment.

Things have changed markedly since Trump seized the “China trade” portfolio from the Treasury’s Steve Mnuchin, and placed it under the control of the USTR, Robert Lighthizer. Unusually for a member of the Trump administration, Lighthizer actually knows his brief. He has had literally decades of experience in trade issues, dating from his days as a deputy US trade representative in 1983 (when Japan was widely perceived as the main trade threat), to his current role as America’s chief trade negotiator. As Trump’s USTR, he has provided policy flesh and bones to the president’s robustly unilateral approach in trade.

If anything, Lighthizer’s trade hawkishness has become even more pronounced over the years, as he has shifted his attention away from Japan to China. In his 2010 congressional testimony, he argued that US policymakers gravely underestimated the threat posed to American manufacturing by virtue of China’s entering the WTO, marshaling an array of evidence to cast doubt on the idea that its entry had brought any significant economic benefits to US workers and businesses. He also highlighted the mercantilist nature of Beijing’s state capitalism and noted that the country’s administrative complexity likely precluded it embracing WTO rules, even if wanted to do so (which he doubted):

“As part of China’s system, specific large companies receive government patronage in the form of credit, contracts, and subsidies. The Chinese government, in turn, sees these ‘national champions’ as a means of competing with foreign rivals and encourages their dominant role in the domestic economy and in export markets.…

“Scholars have questioned whether – given its lack of institutional capacity and the complexity of its constitutional, administrative, and legal system – China is even capable of complying with its WTO obligations.”

No doubt in thrall to the prevailing free-trade ideology, Washington’s “policy passivity” made it loath to use available tools such as the WTO’s “421” special safeguards to counter the resultant trade shock. In that same testimony, Lighthizer also signaled that he was uninterested in the niceties of WTO-style multilateralism, more inclined to the use of “ aggressive unilateralism” via executive orders, diplomatic pressure and, most important, the use of Section 232 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act to levy tariffs on various products, premised on the notion that the targeted country (in today’s case, China) represented a national-security threat.

Most significant from the Lighthizer perspective is an explicit rejection of the idea that China needs to do more than just buy more US goods before the two countries strike a permanent trade deal, which in any case is highly problematic if the end objective is to bring the trade balance between the two countries to zero.

You can understand why. For one thing, the math doesn’t add up: Even if China were to raise its agricultural purchases by US$30 billion, as it has reportedly pledged to do, this is pretty small beer in the context of a $300 billion bilateral trade deficit. As economist Brad Setser highlights:

“The scope for explosive growth in soybeans is actually fairly limited, as the pre-tariff base for soybeans [the No 1 or 2 largest US export to China] was quite high – the United States was supplying $12 billion of China’s almost $40 billion in oil seed imports. A huge tilt away from Brazil might cause US beans exports to double, but getting much more than that would be difficult (there is a natural seasonality to soybean trade that favors alternating supply from the Southern and Northern Hemispheres).

“The real growth would need to come in sectors where China doesn’t buy much now. Corn. Rice. Perhaps pork and beef.… Getting really big numbers there though would risk pushing up US prices, and getting China to abandon its goal of self-sufficiency in basic grains.”

So US farm prices would be pushed up, which would hurt US domestic consumers, even as it cosmetically dresses up America’s trade position vis a vis China.

Setser adds:

“China has signaled it is willing to let foreign firms take majority stakes in a few more sectors, and has reiterated its belief that technology transfer isn’t a legal requirement for entry into the Chinese market. There are likely to be settlements on some long-standing disputes as well – the rating agencies have gotten approval to enter the Chinese market; Visa, American Express and MasterCard likely will finally get approval too ( MasterCard through a joint venture … not everything changes); and some tariffs introduced as retaliation in the past may get dropped.”

But how does the entry into China of consumer credit-card companies or the ratings agencies help Americans? Ironically, this looks precisely like the kind of sop to finance that Trump said he would eschew. However, because of corporate/Wall Street pressure, the Trump agenda pivoted a few months ago from selective decoupling and protection of American strategic industries to opening up China for US investment and pushing China to treat American companies doing business in China more equally. That is why leading US companies have become friendlier and increasingly less critical of Trump’s trade policy, even as the economic commentariat has continued to blast him.

Trump himself needs to understand that a third to a half of “trade” is really transnational production with inputs from suppliers coordinated by mostly third-party manufacturers in Asia (notably in semiconductors). The purpose of modern mercantilism (particularly as it is practiced in China) is not just to sell more finished goods but to try to monopolize the high-value-added rungs of supply chains. It is unclear that targeting China’s trade surplus with the United States will ultimately disrupt these entrenched supply chains. It almost certainly won’t bring semiconductor manufacturing back to America’s shores.

In the end, therefore, pushing China’s leadership to make structural changes to open up China to American companies is probably an illusion. Beijing is unlikely to rip up the model that has seen it create national champions that can now compete successfully with America’s biggest corporations. It may make token promises to curtail cybertheft, or the subsidies that the Trump administration complains create an uneven playing field for American companies.

But, as noted above, even Lighthizer himself has cast doubt that Beijing could enforce those promises, given the administrative complexity of its system of governance. In his eagerness to claim a win, therefore, Trump ironically might end up settling for the usual Faustian bargain: more large Chinese purchases, selective decoupling of supply chains (as American companies rethink their reliance on China), and increased domestic protection for certain sectors (such as 5G) on national-security grounds, Lighthizer’s considerable efforts notwithstanding.

We may have reached the peak as far as this particular tariff war goes, but the longer-term trade tensions will almost certainly persist well beyond this hollow “victory,” which Mr “Art of the Deal” will no doubt claim for himself when the negotiations do officially end.

This article was produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute, which provided it to Asia Times.



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (147998)4/28/2019 1:45:13 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217656
 
Europe, apparently, can and does say “no”, just as Africa cannot say “no” :0)

zerohedge.com

Juncker Rips US Stance On Huawei: EU Won't Ban Firm "Just Because It's Chinese"

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has said he won't bow to US pressure over Huawei, saying that he won't block the telecom giant from doing business in Europe merely because it's a foreign or specifically Chinese firm, so long as it plays by the rules.

Speaking alongside Japanese PM Shinzo Abe on Thursday, Juncker told reporters, "We are not rejecting someone because he is coming from faraway, because he is Chinese, the rules have to be respected."

Prior file photo of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and European Commission President Jean-Claude Junker (front), via UPIAmid Washington's demands that Huawei be barred from Europe's 5G buildout over suspicious it uses its equipment and network to provide a backdoor for Chinese state spying on the West, Juncker pushed back, saying further, "The European Union and our internal market are open markets and all those respecting our rules governing this internal market are welcome."

A Japanese reporter had asked the European and Japanese leaders, "the U.S. is calling on the allies to eliminate telecom equipment of Chinese companies including Huawei, so what did you discuss about that? And on this issue, what do you plan to deal with at G20?"

The Japanese PM had responded to the question in a less direct manner: "We did not talk about specific countries or specific products. Dealing with cyber-security-related risks is extremely important, and we agree that we need to take coordinated actions at G20," Abe said, according to Xinhuanet. Japan has recently banned Huawai 5G technology and equipment from being implemented in its territory.

"In the past, the importance of ICT, the importance of security countermeasures related to the use of ICT has been recognized, and therefore based on that recognition, we will continue that discussion and we wish to continue to collaborate with the EU," Abe said, in reference to information and communications technology (ICT).

Though Washington has lately been aggressive in ramping up pressure on European allies to prevent the multinational China-based firm from getting a toe-hold in Europe's future 5G, the American stance has been met with mixed reactions globally.

Currently, the US, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan maintain blanket bans on the Chinese company's technology from being sold or implemented in their countries. And other so-called "Five Eyes" intelligence sharing countries the UK and Canada are reportedly strongly considering a ban.

Huawei CEO Ren Zhengfei, via LinkedInBut crucially, Germany last week has indicated there are no plans in place to prevent the Chinese telecommunications giant from participating in building Germany's ultra-high speed 5G internet.

Juncker's latest comments could embolden other EU countries and especially those leaders who've remained ambivalent in their public stance to step out of sync with Washington and remain open to business with Huawei.

In recent interviews with German newspapers, Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei said that he's assured the country’s telecommunications regulator that no surveillance "backdoors" on its 5G equipment in the country would be possible, and that he's proposed and will commit to a "no spy agreement" with German regulators.



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (147998)4/29/2019 7:22:50 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217656
 
trade war watch & brief, and no comment needed, except to note that per history matters and mathematics rule, irrespective of the spin by cretins, morons, dullards, dimwits, and just-twits

if team USA is truly worried about Huawei, best to sanction the company into olive natural-size :0)

I am fairly confident that Shanghai stock exchange can withstand a few weeks or months and maybe even 10 years of shock-induced hibernation. HK stock exchange would likely welcome a stroke as long as knowing full well acupuncture is efficacious during recovery. Am less certain about Nasdaq.
calmatters.org

U.S.-imposed tariffs on Chinese imports threaten California’s innovation economy
Guest Commentary
By Peter Leroe-Muñoz, Special to CALmatters

For over a year, the United States has unilaterally imposed a series of escalating tariffs on Chinese imports to pressure China to reform its unfair trade practices and slow China’s rise as a global tech power.

This strategy has been ineffective. More troubling, it places California’s robust economy and innovation leadership at risk.

Foreign companies face significant challenges conducting business in China. They often are required to move servers and infrastructure to the country, and share valuable intellectual property with local agencies with which they must partner. These requirements expose American firms to risk of IP theft, cyber threat, and business disruption.

In addition to addressing unfair trade practices, President Donald Trump’s administration imposed tariffs to slow China as it challenges the United States for global tech supremacy. We must take that challenge seriously.

Since 1991, China has increased spending on research and development from $13 billion annually to over $250 billion annually in 2017. Some financial experts predict China’s innovation spending will surpass America’s by 2020.

China is also trying to dethrone the U.S. in specific emerging technologies. In 2015, it launched the Made in China 2025 initiative, a government program to position the country as a world leader in high-tech fields such as artificial intelligence, robotics, telecommunications, and advanced manufacturing.

The administration may hold out hope that the tariff strategy will compel China to change its ways, but dispute resolution between the countries remains unfinished. China has agreed to minor trade adjustments, but larger changes regarding data localization, IP security, and tech transfers have not been formalized.

Further, Chinese leaders quietly retreated from publicly referencing the Made in China 2025 initiative shortly after the dispute began, but there is no evidence they have abandoned their larger effort.

Unfair trade practices and the rise of a global tech competitor deserve a thoughtful response. But tariffs against China threaten California’s tech industry, which accounts for over $385 billion of our state economy.

Immediately after the U.S. increased costs on Chinese products, China reciprocated with higher tariffs on American tech imports including computers, chemicals, and transportation components. As their products became more expensive overseas, California companies faced lower consumer demand and reduced market share.

The tariffs also made the building blocks of new technologies more expensive. Data-processing machines, printed-circuit assemblies, silicon chips and other core tech components from China are subject to higher costs.

These added expenses undercut the profitability of companies, and make competing in expensive California more difficult. Relocating to lower-cost innovation hubs in other states looks more attractive to cost-conscious businesses.

The financial impact of the Chinese tariffs also threatens California’s innovation lead over global competitors. When a company spends more on imported elements, it spends less on new products and imaginative breakthroughs.

This puts Golden State companies at risk of an innovation deficit, falling behind foreign organizations that have more money to spend on research and development.

If the United States wants to lead global trade and the development of emerging technologies, it must abandon the “go it alone” approach of imposing tariffs which put strain on California’s economy and innovation.

One path forward would be to work with international partners.

In 2016, the U.S. pulled out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a coalition of 12 Pacific countries that formed a unified trade bulwark against China. Now, Congress and the Administration should discuss rejoining the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

A unified and leveraged approach to addressing trade and tech disputes with China is a better plan for resolving the current conflict, and will keep the U.S. front-and-center in the global dialogue around international trade and future technologies.

Peter Leroe-Muñoz is vice-president of Technology & Innovation Policy for the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, pleroemunoz@svlg.org. He wrote this commentary for CALmatters.