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WTO helping China Loot Caterpillar
americanthinker.com ^ | 10/04/2010 | Howard Richman & Raymond Richman

Posted on 10/04/2010 1:00:25 PM PDT by goldendays

Caterpillar is one excellent company. It is building new factories now in Texas, Arkansas, and North Carolina, from which it will export products made by American workers all around the world. Its excellent worldwide parts distribution network gives its used equipment a very high resale value. But on September 29 Caterpillar announced it is building its twelfth factory in China -- this one to produce mini-excavators.

Why can’t Caterpillar make a profit exporting mini-excavators to China? The answer is simple: China has a 30% tariff on all excavators. In fact it has a similar high tariff on just about every vehicle, be it a Ford car, a GMC truck, a Harley Davidson motorcycle, or a giant mining machine made by Bucyrus International.

When President Obama’s economic adviser Larry Summers was Secretary of the Treasury under President Clinton, he oversaw China’s entry to the WTO (World Trade Organization), and he let China declare all these vehicles as a “strategic sector” entitled to high protective tariffs. This error, by itself, should have disqualified Summers from ever again holding a responsible position in the United States government.

Summers, like nearly all economists, does not worry about such trivial things as unfair tariffs imposed by our trading partners. In his ivory tower, trade is always assumed to be in balance. Thus, when China puts a tariff on one of its imports, it causes the exchange rate of its currency to go up in value, which hurts the competitiveness of its exports. However, China easily found a way out of the ivory tower assumptions. It simply manipulates currency exchange rates to make its exports attractive and to keep imports expensive, thus perpetuating and increasing its trade surplus.

The Chinese government has long used these tariffs as a lever in order to loot American companies of their technology. First it forces vehicle-making companies to locate their factories in China if they want to sell to the growing Chinese market. Then it forces them to “share” their proprietary technologies with Chinese competitors. Caterpillar already has 11 factories in China. It also has two Chinese competitors – Liugong and Sany – that are producing what one expert describes as “knockoffs” of Caterpillar models, and they are exporting them to the world.

Similarly General Motors Co., as a condition for producing vehicles in China, has to share its technology with China's SAIC Motor Corporation. At first SAIC just shared production and profits with GM on GM brands produced in China. Now SAIC competes directly with GM by selling its own models in China using GM's technology. Last year, Bloomberg reported:

SAIC and other Chinese carmakers that work with overseas companies are introducing their own models to boost margins in a country set to become the world's biggest auto market this year. Foreign automakers typically have no remedy because Chinese law forces them to work with a local partner.

Some progressives are pleased that Chinese technology looting helps redistribute wealth from the rich Americans to the deserving Chinese. But they ignore the effect that this looting will have on future world growth. Recently China told foreign car companies that are already manufacturing in China that they will have to share any electric car technologies that they develop with their Chinese competitors! Just how much will car companies spend on developing more efficient vehicles when they know that they will have to “share” whatever they develop?

China’s self-created trade imbalances have given it a 10% growth rate while its victims’ economies stagnate (exports stimulate growth). China is now using its rapid growth as a lever for demanding that high tech and pharmaceutical companies move their R&D laboratories and patents to China in order to continue selling to China’s growing market.

In Ayn Rand’s book Atlas Shrugged, looters seize control of the United States economy. They stifle economic growth by forcing creators to give up their inventions to the state. We are seeing just that sort of looting on a worldwide scale right now. China is looting western companies of their technology under cover of WTO rules that let them do it.

But buried deep within the WTO rules is a solution, a rule that lets trade deficit countries impose import duties or limitations in order to bring trade into reasonable balance. We could take the profit out of protective tariffs and currency manipulation simply by imposing a scaled tariff on the goods produced by any country with which trade is chronically out of balance. A scaled tariff is one whose rate goes up when our trade deficit with a country goes up, goes down when our trade deficit goes down, and disappears when trade moves into balance.

Such a tariff would force the currency manipulating countries to open up their markets to our exports or else they would lose their access to our markets. American companies would no longer have to let China loot their technology as the price of admission to China’s markets; they would be able to produce in the United States and still sell to China.

So is the WTO worth saving? On the surface, the answer is “No.” WTO rules permit China to place 30% tariffs on vehicles. WTO rules let China manipulate currency exchange rates in order to keep its trade out of balance. WTO rules let China loot western companies of their technologies.

But there is one special WTO rule that could make the whole system work. It allows a country experiencing trade deficits to impose duties or other limitations on imports in order to bring trade into balance. It’s time that we started to take advantage of it.

The authors maintain a blog at www.idealtaxes.com, and co-authored the 2008 book, Trading Away Our Future: How to Fix Our Government-Driven Trade Deficits and Faulty Tax System Before it's Too Late, published by Ideal Taxes Association. 8 Comments on "WTO helping China Loot Caterpillar"


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arkansas; aynrand; bucyrus; caterpillar; china; currency; freetrade; larrysummers; manipulation; northcarolina; tariff; texas; trade; wto
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1 posted on 10/04/2010 1:00:27 PM PDT by goldendays
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To: goldendays

The Chinese are serious people.
We are not.


2 posted on 10/04/2010 1:04:37 PM PDT by Hans
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To: goldendays

Gasp ! Expect serious incoming from the Free Trade Religionists...


3 posted on 10/04/2010 1:07:27 PM PDT by major-pelham
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To: Hans

Ruling could cost Boeing billions, EU officials say

European officials claimed Wednesday that a preliminary decision by the world’s top trade court found that aid to Boeing violated international rules, leading to the prospect that the Chicago-based plane maker may have to forgo, or even pay back, billions in subsidies.

Details of the ruling weren’t made public, and a final judgment isn’t expected for several months.

Boeing issued a statement saying, in part: “If today’s reports are accurate that some $3 billion of the EU’s claims were upheld by the WTO, excluding the claims that relate to past programs long ago remedied by Congress, then the ruling amounts to a massive rejection of the EU case.”

The ruling comes three months after the WTO found that European planemaker Airbus gained an unfair advantage through billions worth of subsidies. AP


4 posted on 10/04/2010 1:07:40 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: goldendays

WTO says US ban on Chinese poultry is illegal
By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER – 5 days ago
GENEVA — The Obama administration received its first rebuke from the World Trade Organization on Wednesday as a three-member panel declared that an American ban on Chinese poultry is illegal.
The ruling came as the U.S. House of Representatives prepared a vote condemning Chinese currency manipulation and threatening possible trade penalties. But its negative outcome for Washington could bolster Beijing’s claims that U.S. lawmakers are bending to protectionist pressure amid high unemployment.
The WTO said the U.S. was violating a number of its trade obligations by preventing Chinese chicken parts from entering the U.S. market, ruling against a measure in last year’s U.S. federal spending bill.


5 posted on 10/04/2010 1:10:38 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: goldendays
Impose the tariffs and China's economy will tank.
6 posted on 10/04/2010 1:12:01 PM PDT by Rumplemeyer
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To: major-pelham

they try to tell you America
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1590858026591557284#


7 posted on 10/04/2010 1:13:39 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: 1rudeboy

One way free trade with the enemy is economic suicide ping.


8 posted on 10/04/2010 1:14:32 PM PDT by Last Dakotan
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To: Last Dakotan

(((three-member panel)))declared that an American ban on Chinese poultry is illegal.


9 posted on 10/04/2010 1:16:02 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: goldendays

Did someone hold a gun to Caterpillar’s head and force them to ship their technology to China?


10 posted on 10/04/2010 1:17:22 PM PDT by Steely Tom (Obama goes on long after the thrill of Obama is gone)
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To: goldendays

We’ve been handing the commie bastards our technology and manufacturing industries for years, with the full blessing of the ignorant, worthless politicians.


11 posted on 10/04/2010 1:17:55 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: Steely Tom

yes we did


12 posted on 10/04/2010 1:19:25 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: goldendays

Caterpillar should refuse to build their equipment in China. Once China figures out how to build this equipment, they kick Caterpillar out. I’d give it two years.


13 posted on 10/04/2010 1:19:39 PM PDT by RC2
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To: Steely Tom

i think they try to call it FREE TRADE lol lol


14 posted on 10/04/2010 1:20:46 PM PDT by goldendays (that)
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To: Steely Tom
BRAVO!!! These companies such as Caterpillar are under no obligation to do business with China. Yes, China has one whopping population, but if you are basically whoring yourself out to get into the market and "increase your market share", don't be suprised when it comes around and bites you in the ass.

I am all for making a buck, but when all you think about is the next buck, you aren't thinking about the pifalls you might encounter down that path.

15 posted on 10/04/2010 1:28:14 PM PDT by Fedupwithit ("The welfare of humanity is always the alibi of tyrants" -Albert Camus)
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To: goldendays

Anyone still supporting Liberal Free Trade Globalism...especially Free Trade with Communist China...is an idiot, moron, and a Communist.

Communist China does not practice Free Trade...and only a Commie-loving moron Free Trader thinks they can Free Trade with Communist China.

Its time to end the WTO< NAFTA, UN, and any and all Globalist entities. America grew strong on its own...not without hooking up with Globalist organizations.

Every single US trade partner has some type of tariff or trade barrier on US products. Only idiot Free Trader Globalists think otherwise....even as the facts point out the Globalists wrong


16 posted on 10/04/2010 1:29:33 PM PDT by UCFRoadWarrior (They don't let you build churches in Mecca)
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To: Steely Tom

Possibly lawyers from big-money shareholders, demanding that Caterpillar “increase shareholder value”?


17 posted on 10/04/2010 1:42:00 PM PDT by jiggyboy (Ten per cent of poll respondents are either lying or insane)
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To: Fedupwithit

I agree. What is fueling this is corporate greed. Not saying they shouldn’t make a buck but for years these companies have been stiffing american workers in lieu of cheaper foreign labor. what goes around comes around. sadly americans will still be on the loosing end because they are dealing with a country that has no scruples.


18 posted on 10/04/2010 1:50:20 PM PDT by applpie
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To: goldendays

“When goods stop crossing boarders, armies do.” (or something along those lines). As things are going now this will eventually happen.


19 posted on 10/04/2010 1:52:36 PM PDT by DarkWaters ("Deception is a state of mind --- and the mind of the state" --- James Jesus Angleton)
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To: major-pelham

“Expect serious incoming from the Free Trade Religionists...”

Given that China is not engaging in free trade with its 30% tariffs, I doubt they will say much.


20 posted on 10/04/2010 2:22:05 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Beware Obama's Reichstag Fire.)
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