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Fear of the dragon (China’s export prospects)
The Economist ^ | January 7, 2010 | unattributed

Posted on 01/10/2010 7:22:50 AM PST by 1rudeboy

China’s share of world markets increased during the recession. It will keep rising

MANY people start the new year by resolving to change their old ways. Not China. On December 27th Zhong Shan, the country’s vice-minister of trade, declared that China will continue to increase its share of world exports. Figures due out on January 11th are expected to show that China’s exports in December were higher than a year ago, after 13 months of year-on-year declines. China’s exports fell by around 17% in 2009 as a whole, but other countries’ slumped by even more. As a result China overtook Germany to become the world’s largest exporter and its share of world exports jumped to almost 10%, up from 3% in 1999 (see chart).

China takes an even bigger slice of America’s market. In the first ten months of 2009 America imported 15% less from China than in the same period of 2008, but its imports from the rest of the world fell by 33%, lifting China’s market share to a record 19%. So although America’s trade deficit with China narrowed, China now accounts for almost half of America’s total deficit, up from less than one-third in 2008.

Trade frictions with the rest of the world are hotting up. On December 30th America’s International Trade Commission approved new tariffs on imports of Chinese steel pipes, which it ruled were being unfairly subsidised. This is the largest case of its kind so far involving China. On December 22nd European Union governments voted to extend anti-dumping duties on shoes imported from China for another 15 months.

Foreigners insist that the main reason for China’s growing market share is that the government in Beijing has kept its currency weak. But there are several other reasons why China’s exports held up better than those of its competitors during the global recession. Lower incomes encouraged consumers to trade down to cheaper goods, and the elimination of global textile quotas in January 2009 allowed China to increase its slice of that market.

How high could China’s market share go? Over the ten years to 2008 China’s exports grew by an annual average of 23% in dollar terms, more than twice as fast as world trade. If it continued to expand at this pace, China might grab around one-quarter of world exports within ten years. That would beat America’s 18% share of world exports in the early 1950s, a figure that has since dropped to 8%. China’s exports are likely to grow more slowly over the next decade, as demand in rich economies remains subdued, but its market share will probably continue to creep up. Projections in the IMF’s World Economic Outlook imply that China’s exports will account for 12% of world trade by 2014.

Its 10% slice this year will equal that achieved by Japan at its peak in 1986, but Japan’s share has since fallen back to less than 5%. Its exporters were badly hurt by the sharp rise in the yen—by more than 100% against the dollar between 1985 and 1988—and many moved their factories abroad, some of them to China. The combined export-market share of the four Asian tigers (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan) also peaked at 10% before slipping back. Will China’s exports hit the same barrier as a result of weakening competitiveness, or rising protectionism?

An IMF working paper published in 2009 calculated that if China remained as dependent on exports as in recent years, then to sustain annual GDP growth of 8% its share of world exports would rise to about 17% by 2020. To consider whether that was feasible, the authors analysed the global absorption capacity of three export industries—steel, shipbuilding and machinery. They concluded that to achieve the required export growth, China would have to reduce prices, which would be increasingly hard to manage, whether through productivity gains or a squeeze in profits. In many export industries, particularly steel, margins are already wafer-thin.

However, China’s future export growth is likely to come not from existing industries but from higher-value products, such as computer chips and cars. Japan’s exports also moved swiftly up the value chain, but whereas this was not enough to support durable gains in its market share, China has the advantage of capital controls that will prevent its exchange rate rising as abruptly as Japan’s did in the 1980s. When China does eventually allow the yuan to rise, it will do so gradually.

Another big difference is the vastness of China’s economy. China consists, in effect, of several economies with different wage levels. As Japan moved into higher-value exports, rising productivity pushed up wages, making old industries, such as textiles, uncompetitive. In China, as factories in the richer coastal areas switch to more sophisticated goods, the production of textiles and shoes can move inland where costs remain cheaper. As a result China may be able to remain competitive in a wider range of industries for longer.

Foreign hostility to China’s export dominance is growing. Paul Krugman, the winner of the 2008 Nobel economics prize, wrote recently in the New York Times that by holding down its currency to support exports, China “drains much-needed demand away from a depressed world economy”. He argued that countries that are victims of Chinese mercantilism may be right to take protectionist action.

From Beijing, things look rather different. China’s merchandise exports have collapsed from 36% of GDP in 2007 to around 24% last year. China’s current-account surplus has fallen from 11% to an estimated 6% of GDP. In 2007 net exports accounted for almost three percentage points of China’s GDP growth; last year they were a drag on its growth to the tune of three percentage points. In other words, rather than being a drain on global demand, China helped pull the world economy along during the course of last year.

Foreigners look at only one side of the coin. China’s imports have been stronger than its exports, rebounding by 27% in the year to November, when its exports were still falling. America’s exports to China (its third-largest export market) rose by 13% in the year to October, at the same time as its exports to Canada and Mexico (the two countries above China) fell by 14%.

Some forecasters, such as the IMF, expect China’s trade surplus to start widening again this year unless the government makes bold policy changes, such as revaluing the yuan. However, Chris Wood, an analyst at CLSA, a brokerage, argues that China is doing more for global rebalancing than America. Rebalancing requires that China spends more and America saves more. Mr Wood argues that China is doing more to boost domestic consumption (for example, through incentives to stimulate purchases of cars and consumer durables, and increased health-care spending) than America is doing to boost its saving. America’s total saving rate fell in the third quarter of last year to only 10% of GDP, barely half its level a decade ago. Households saved more, but this was more than offset by increased government “dissaving”.

Strong growth in China’s spending and imports is unlikely to dampen protectionist pressures, however. China’s rising share of world exports will command much more attention. Foreign demands to revalue the yuan will intensify. A new year looks sure to entrench old resentments.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: china; economy; freetraitors; mfn
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1 posted on 01/10/2010 7:22:50 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: Toddsterpatriot; Mase; expat_panama

Lots of interesting stuff, here.


2 posted on 01/10/2010 7:24:09 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

More cheap stuff at any cost. Enjoy the fruits of outsourcing.


3 posted on 01/10/2010 7:24:45 AM PST by mysterio
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To: 1rudeboy

Let the trade war begin.

Bring back all the outsourced jobs, and require reciprocal trade, by country.

Just do it.


4 posted on 01/10/2010 7:25:52 AM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (2012: Repeal it all... All of it!)
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To: mysterio; Cringing Negativism Network

Man, you guys read and compose replies quickly. LOL


5 posted on 01/10/2010 7:26:56 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
Hopefully American consumers will remain frugal, paying down debt instead of borrowing to buy Chinese crapola. Let the rest of the world buy their stuff if they need it so bad.
6 posted on 01/10/2010 7:38:19 AM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: 1rudeboy

The Asian growth model on steroids.

Lure Western manufacturing plants with cheap labor. Gain maximum possible access to the US and other markets of Western nations (easy to do with “free” trade nitwits making decisions). Close domestic markets to most imports from Western nations. Create huge trade surpluses with gullible Western nations and squeal like stuck pigs if any Western nations demands that China really practice two-way free trade.

Undervalue your currency and keep the pretend free trade going on and on as your cash reserves build up and the US becomes more and more indebted to you. Most in the US are still too stuck on their pretend free market and pretend free trade theories to realize that their gigantic budget deficits and trade deficits are closely related.


7 posted on 01/10/2010 7:41:25 AM PST by Will88
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To: Will88
Most in the US are still too stuck on their pretend free market and pretend free trade theories to realize that their gigantic budget deficits and trade deficits are closely related.

And the flip-side of that protectionist argument is that, if the U.S. government collected more in taxes (either by tariff or preventing U.S. companies from off-shoring), it would spend less money.

8 posted on 01/10/2010 7:45:30 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: Will88

China will also increase exporting unemployment to this country.


9 posted on 01/10/2010 8:10:04 AM PST by ex-snook ("Above all things, truth beareth away the victory.")
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To: 1rudeboy
And the flip-side of that protectionist argument is that, if the U.S. government collected more in taxes (either by tariff or preventing U.S. companies from off-shoring), it would spend less money.

So, since we're talking China, you contend that the US has two-way free trade with them?

And stop using cheap slur words as a substitute for rational discussion. You sound like Jesse Jackson. Protectionist is the equivalent of a racism charge, used by the pretend free traders who refuse to acknowledge that damned little two-way free trade exists between the US and most nations in the world.

It's the well proven Asian model for growth that most all developing nations want to follow. And that requires that the US export jobs to cheap labor nations, and give them low tariff access to US markets. You apparently approve of this as US policy on and on?

10 posted on 01/10/2010 8:19:55 AM PST by Will88
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To: Will88

Come off it, I’ve probably told you that we don’t have free trade with China a hundred times. And could you point out my “cheap slur word?” Thanks in advance.


11 posted on 01/10/2010 8:23:10 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
The word in italics. And, yes, it is nothing but a cheap slur word used by pretend free traders just as JJ and Reverend Al and others use the world racism.

The globalist and pretend free traders have their slur words just as the race baiters do: protectionist, isolationist, restrictionist, nativist, xenophobe, nationalistic. They're used in the US and EU constantly in discussions of trade, immigration, globalism, etc.

12 posted on 01/10/2010 8:28:53 AM PST by Will88
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To: Will88

“Protectionist” is a “cheap slur word?” As distinguished from “pretend free trader,” or “globalist?” Please elaborate on this style-rule. Is it a matter of usage? Such as?


13 posted on 01/10/2010 8:31:13 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
"read and compose"

Now that is a good joke. Freepers don't read.

14 posted on 01/10/2010 8:35:37 AM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: Ben Ficklin

I have yet to see any evidence anyone’s read the article. But you are correct, it happens a lot.


15 posted on 01/10/2010 8:38:06 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
Is it a matter of usage?

Yes, it is used to avoid real discussion of specific facts and issues. When any tactic is suggested, or tried, as a means to get China to open its market more in any area, or to stop dumping products in the US, the pretend free traders immediately begin the "protectionism" accusations. Not much detailed discussion of an issue takes place, just the protectionism charge, and the spectre of a giant trade war. - "Globalist" and "Globalism" are in such common usage, I guess it's a personal opinion whether or not they're slurs.

And pretend free trade and pretend free markets are not slurs. They're just my phrases to describe the reality of US participation in international trade. Maybe we almost have free trade with a few European nations, but few others. And the international markets are not free markets for a large number of reasons. Anyone who discusses international trade as if it's free trade in free markets is pretending.

And, demanding equal access to markets, or fair trade, is not protectionism.

And that pretending has given foreign nations far freer access to US markets than the US has to other nations' markets. And that's causing huge damage to the US, and that's a major part of why we have such huge trade and budget deficits, and national debt.

And there is no way out unless some of these loony policies are changed.

16 posted on 01/10/2010 9:13:32 AM PST by Will88
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To: Will88
gigantic budget deficits and trade deficits are closely related.

What's the relationship? Is it a formula? Plug in one and you'll get the other?

That would be a useful formula. Please ping me when you post it. Thanks.

17 posted on 01/10/2010 9:16:30 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Math is hard. Harder if you're stupid.)
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To: Will88
And, demanding equal access to markets, or fair trade, is not protectionism.

That's what is called "free trade," silly. And I don't see why I have to take a knee and bow to the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States every time I use the word, "protectionist," when you are free to define terms any way you wish. In fact, it is hypocritical for you to insist that I do so.

18 posted on 01/10/2010 9:17:26 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: Will88
Maybe we almost have free trade with a few European nations, but few others.

Thank you (at least), for the "maybe." Actually, we have free trade agreements with zero European countries. So in this case, you could've simply typed, "we have 'pretend' free trade with a few European nations."

What's the point of introducing a new term when even you cannot use it correctly?

19 posted on 01/10/2010 9:26:40 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: Will88
"And there is no way out unless some of these loony policies are changed. "

Amen. What is called 'free trade' is government to government lobbyist agreements.

Trade is we buy product from you and you buy product from us. It is not we buy product from you and trade you jobs, factories and Treasuries in return. That's the loony deals that have caused economic misery.

Democrat leaders yell that the placebo of green jobs with resurrect us and Republican leaders are yelling for the mirage of tax cuts. Obviously if the leaders bought product in shopping centers they would see where the jobs are. And jobs are not coming back until we make more of what we import.

20 posted on 01/10/2010 9:30:45 AM PST by ex-snook ("Above all things, truth beareth away the victory.")
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