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China's Rise Is Inevitable -- So Deal With It
Forbes Magazine ^ | 6-28-02 | Mark Lewis

Posted on 07/19/2002 10:29:32 PM PDT by AIG

NEW YORK - A decade ago it was Japan that touched off nationalistic fears among Americans who worry about being out-competed by Asian industrialists. Now it is China's turn to generate the scare stories. The reflex cannot be helped, but nor should it be indulged in any policy sense. China's rise is inevitable and should not be viewed as a threat.

Consider this front-page story in today's New York Times: "China Emerges as Rival to U.S. in Asian Trade." That sort of headline will become commonplace in the next few years as China increases its dominance of East Asia's economy. Yet at the same time, U.S. exporters will benefit from the growth of China's internal market, and U.S. consumers will benefit by buying China's low-priced and increasingly high-quality exports.

China's rise does call for an adaptive response from Washington, which must find a graceful way to accommodate itself to the new regional superpower. But in terms of trade, the key policy already is in place--China was last year ushered into the World Trade Organization, under whose auspices this formerly closed society will be fully integrated into the global economy.

Of course, there's still the little matter of Taiwan, which the U.S. is pledged (in vague terms) to defend. The best-case scenario: China's embrace of capitalism forces it to evolve into a full-fledged democracy, as people who gain economic control over their lives insist on political control as well. If that happens, Taiwan will end up clamoring to merge with the mainland in order to avoid the fate of China's other small neighbors, which will find themselves overshadowed by the revitalized Middle Kingdom.

Let's minimize the hand-wringing over this situation. Would anybody seriously prefer that China had remained shackled to the Maoist precepts that kept its economy small and weak? In any case, that's not an option. China's emergence is a fact to be recognized rather than fretted over. And it is also an opportunity, because America with its flexible economic system is well positioned to adapt to new realities and benefit from them.

The supposed threat from Japan generated a lot of concern in the early '90s, yet nowadays the scare headlines are all about Japan's economic decline, which is seen as bad for the United States. If China's economy runs into serious trouble, that too will be bad news for America.

But China, even if it stumbles along the way, is a much better bet than Japan to eventually achieve regional dominance, both politically and economically. This will make some Americans nervous. They may as well start getting used to the idea now--and make plans to take advantage of it.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: china; chinastuff
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To: arm958
There's probably been more than 10 mil. abortions in the U.S.A. in the last 20 years.
101 posted on 07/20/2002 10:12:17 PM PDT by AIG
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To: AIG
"I don't see the US and China fighting any wars now or in the future because as the eventual co-economic superpowers of the world in an era of globalization"

Yeah, we're just so eager to go from sole economic superpower to co-equal economic superpower.

If China takes the US's handling of foreign affairs as it's model, that is it avoids foreign entanglements for another -say- fifty years, it will do alright.

It will become more Taiwan than Taiwan will become PRC however.

102 posted on 07/20/2002 10:13:19 PM PDT by mrsmith
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To: VaBthang4
China is different from the old Soviet Union in that Chinese don't actually believe that Marxism works.
103 posted on 07/20/2002 10:13:22 PM PDT by AIG
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To: Lake
"The reason is simply this: the reactionaries represent reaction, we represent progress."

Maintaining power by repression and fear isn't progress. Communism has totally failed in every country where it's been instilled.

Whip them into a 3rd world sewer where they belong.

104 posted on 07/20/2002 10:14:02 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: Jeff Head
Even priests have to beg to get money. You can't eat your moral principles.
105 posted on 07/20/2002 10:15:29 PM PDT by AIG
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To: dalereed
>>Communism has totally failed in every country where it's been instilled.

Right. The Chinese know it. That's why they started reform.

106 posted on 07/20/2002 10:21:56 PM PDT by Lake
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To: applemac_g4
Most Western countries themselves were capitalist dictatorships before the American and French Revolutions, particularly during the period of the "enlightened despots" in the 1700's who promoted uniform property rights, rule of law, etc. which set the stage for capitalism to flourish more efficiently, allowed a middle-class to develop, and allowed the "bourgeois" classes to instigate both the French and American Revolutions and bring about modern, capitalist society as we know it. In other words, "capitalist dictatorships" aren't that bad and seem to be a necessary transitional stage on the road to majority middle-class population which is the basis of a stable, modern democracy. Most of today's Third World democracies are jokes because they never developed majority middle-class populations. The E. Asian "tigers" like Taiwan, S. Korea, etc. all developed majority middle-class populations first under one-party, authoritarian rule over the past 50 years before making the leap to full-fledged democracy.
107 posted on 07/20/2002 10:22:04 PM PDT by AIG
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To: mrsmith
>>It will become more Taiwan than Taiwan will become PRC however.

PRC will become more Taiwan and absorb Taiwan without pain.

108 posted on 07/20/2002 10:24:09 PM PDT by Lake
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To: All
A report on the Chinese economy
109 posted on 07/20/2002 10:24:44 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: RedWhiteBlue
The CIA World Factbook uses per-capita GDP figures adjusted for purchasing-power parity. I used the raw, non-adjusted per-capita GDP figures.
110 posted on 07/20/2002 10:25:25 PM PDT by AIG
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To: Lake
"PRC will become more Taiwan and absorb Taiwan without pain. "

Without pain to either of them.

I think they'll have to have a government with "separation of powers"- or some inventive equivalent- to support a large middle class, but supporting a large middle class is the only thing they must do to appease Taiwan.

111 posted on 07/20/2002 10:41:53 PM PDT by mrsmith
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To: Lake
The only reform that is going on in China is succering us into making them into a power large enough to clean our power and put the entire world under communism.
112 posted on 07/20/2002 10:48:14 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: AIG
Take your little "red book" and stick it where the sun doesn't shine.
113 posted on 07/20/2002 10:50:21 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: All
The U.S. Trade Deficit with China - The United States has played a significant role in helping China’s export-led growth policies succeed in a way that is not evidenced by China’s other trading relationships. The U.S. consumer goods market was the cornerstone for China’s growth in trade in the 1990s. As trade between the United States and China expanded, so too did the U.S. trade deficit. The growth of U.S. imports from China has far exceeded the growth in our exports to China. According to WTO data, in 2000, the United States took 41.3 percent of China’s total exports, while China purchased about 2 percent of total U.S. exports. From 1990 to 2000, U.S. exports to China increased from $4.8 billion to $16 billion, while imports from China leaped six-fold from $16.3 billion to $103 billion. The result has been a U.S. goods trade deficit with China that has ballooned from approximately $6 billion in 1989 to $87 billion in 2000. Notably, U.S.-China trade in manufactures accounts for virtually the entire U.S. trade deficit with China.3

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Together the United States, E.U., and Japan received about 88 percent of China’s total exports in 2000, and took over 90 percent their exports in manufactured goods.

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Investment and China’s Rise as an Exporting Platform - Throughout the 1990s, FDI flows into China, which have been primarily concentrated in the manufacturing sector, helped China become a world center for manufacturing and continue to have a significant impact on China’s export-led growth. The Commission has reviewed a study reporting that over 90 percent of FDI into China was for the establishment of new businesses, while over 90 percent of the FDI into the United States was for acquisition of existing U.S. businesses.5

The share of exports to the United States produced by foreign-invested firms has steadily increased over the last decade and a half. China required export performance as part of its investment agreements with foreign firms. In 1985, foreign-invested firms produced 1percent of China’s exports. In 1990, they produced 12.5 percent, and in 2000 48 percent.6 Researchers at the New York Federal Reserve Bank estimate that only 20 percent of China’s total imports reach China’s domestic markets, while the other 80 percent consist of capital goods and industrial inputs used for the country’s exporting zones.7

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Currency Manipulation - The exchange rate of the Chinese yuan (or Renminbi) to the dollar is also an important contributing factor to the U.S. deficit. While the United States has a free-floating exchange rate in which official intervention is both rare and done in small amounts, China holds a soft peg to the dollar with its currency nonconvertible on the capital account. In 2001, despite the country’s $23 billion global trade surplus and FDI inflow of $46.8 billion, China maintained its soft peg. China accomplishes this through large official purchases of dollars in order to maintain an exchange rate lower than would otherwise occur by market forces alone. By holding down the exchange rate, China gains an unfair trade advantage that increases the U.S. trade deficit beyond what the market would dictate. Ernest H. Preeg, Senior Fellow in Trade and Productivity at the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI, who testified before the Commission in May 2001, wrote in his testimony to the Senate Banking Committee in May 2002:

Based on the IMF definition, China has clearly been manipulating its currency for mercantilist purposes. The Bank of China has made protracted large scale purchases of foreign exchange- $150 billion since 1995- in order to maintain a large trade surplus as an offset to poor growth performance in the domestic [Chinese] economy.16

114 posted on 07/20/2002 10:52:55 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: dalereed
America will survive just fine for a long time to come. China's rise doesn't necessarily mean America will fall. America will only decline if it doesn't take care of its own internal problems. 50 years from now, China's economy may be almost two times bigger than America's, but it doesn't necessarily mean that America's population won't be bigger or its economy won't still be thriving as it is now for the most part. 50 years from now, you'll have a lot of the Fortune 500 getting most of their revenues from China. America won't want to go to war with China. Likewise, China won't want to go to war with America whose corporations contribute so much to China's economy.
115 posted on 07/20/2002 10:59:01 PM PDT by AIG
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To: AIG
Force our corporations to get out of China and stay out of China and then proceed with a plan to destroy them.
116 posted on 07/20/2002 11:02:18 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: maui_hawaii
If you want China's imports from the US to increase, the best way to do it is by developing China's overall economy further so that China can start becoming a bigger importer of US goods. Cutting off trade with China in general will only make China import less from America in the long run. US firms invested so much in China mostly because US consumers have an insatiable demand for cheap, Chinese-made goods. The way to lessen US investment in China is to somehow convince American consumers to give up their love of bargains once and for all, but this is unlikely.
117 posted on 07/20/2002 11:04:56 PM PDT by AIG
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To: AIG
Oh please....what are you the excuse maker...

If the Soviets had truly believed in Marxism like you say....then they wouldnt have tried to go socialist.

They had to try to open up to a mix of government controlled capitalism and communism in an attempt to keep up with us financially.

That is exactly what the Chinese are now trying to do. And like the Soviets....they will fail. The Communist Government will collapse and centuries old ethnic strife, regional grudges will reappear.

We'll reach out to different groups within China proper both politically and financially, dividing & conquering from 3000 miles away.

Same song different bassackwards dictatorship.

118 posted on 07/20/2002 11:05:44 PM PDT by VaBthang4
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To: mrsmith
>>I think they'll have to have a government with "separation of powers"- or some inventive equivalent- to support a large middle class,

I think the democracy in China has to be realized like this. First of all, the CCP has to be a democracy (becaue multi-party politics is not a feasible solution to China in a foreseeable future). Different factions repersenting different groups must be allowed to exist and share power within the party. Once the CCP becomes a democracy, the political reform will be easy.

119 posted on 07/20/2002 11:07:24 PM PDT by Lake
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To: maui_hawaii
Sure, China benefits from exports, but so what? Most of the rest of Asia from Japan to Taiwan to S. Korea grew through exports, didn't they? They are export-based economies for the most part. I don't get your continual haranguing about how exports are somehow an illegitimate strategy to get rich. But at least for China, it has a big population so it will have a bigger domestic economy than Taiwan, S. Korea, Malaysia, or whoever could ever dream of.
120 posted on 07/20/2002 11:07:48 PM PDT by AIG
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