BEIJING, Sept. 23 -- Like the other two Group of 20
(G20) summits held since the global banking meltdown a year ago, the very
picture of cooperation among heads of government will be the main message at the
G20 gathering in Pittsburgh on Sept 24-25 - a message these leaders hope will
further calm fears enough to bring the international economic crisis to a soft
landing, sooner rather than later.
Unfortunately, we might hear a strikingly dissonant
note in the otherwise harmonious chorus of cooperation in Pittsburgh. When the
G20 meets, Washington and Beijing may be on the brink of a trade war over
Chinese tire exports to the United States and the subsequent complaints from
China about protectionist practices. That's obviously of great concern, not only
for the U.S.-China trade itself. Because of its size and reach, that bilateral
relationship also has disproportionate implications for the overall well-being
of the global economy, which is now showing flickers of recovery.
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A journalist works in the press center
of the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh, the United
States, Sept. 22, 2009. The G20 summit of world economic leaders is
scheduled to be held in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24.(Xinhua/Zhang
Yan) Photo
Gallery>>> |
While
not entirely unexpected, the decision to impose the tire tariffs is a departure
for the Obama Administration, which has thus far mostly restrained itself from
protectionist measures. Likewise, the Chinese government had been, until now,
careful not to upset the trade relationship with similar actions of its own
against U.S. products. "Both countries have been generally cooperative up to this
point," says Mickey Kantor, former U.S. Secretary of Commerce and U.S. Trade
Representative and a member of my firm's International Advisory Board. "They
have followed through on past commitments not to let the current economic
recession force them to do things that are protectionist."
Still, the initial exchange over the tire decision is
not encouraging. There is little doubt that domestic politics played a role in
Obama's decision to impose the tariffs. Frankly, that decision was more about
healthcare than tires. By some accounts, the success or failure of Obama's
presidency hangs in the balance over the fate of his healthcare reform proposal.
One opposition party member predicted that failure of healthcare reform would
"break" him. Consequently, he cannot risk alienating any labor unions, including
the Steelworkers Union, which pressed for the tariffs and which supports
healthcare reform.
This is a situation where actions speak louder than
words. China's vigorous protest over this decision was predictable. The big
question is whether China complains, but grudgingly accepts the tariffs as a
politically driven exception to Obama's declared commitment to free trade. Or
whether they see it as a more fundamental reversal and take retaliatory action,
which could lead to a significant breach on trade. Time will tell how much of an
impact the trade row will have on the bilateral economic relationship. But at
the G20 and beyond, observers should also watch closely the two countries' body
language on other profound and difficult challenges.
The thorniest revolves around how the United States will reduce
its federal budget deficit. In short, it will be a chore, especially considering
the $787 billion economic stimulus program Congress passed earlier this year,
the hundreds of billions the government appropriated to rescue financial
institutions at the fall of 2008 and the estimated billions more it will cost if
meaningful health care reform legislation passes this year. All this is, of
course, above and beyond the enormous deficits President Barack Obama inherited
from his predecessor.
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A journalist works in the press center
of the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh, the United
States, Sept. 22, 2009. The G20 summit of world economic leaders is
scheduled to be held in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24.(Xinhua/Zhang
Yan) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Even
though China enacted its own stimulus package worth 4 trillion yuan (or $586
billion) and surely understands the Obama Administration's rationale for pumping
more money into its stalled economy, China has serious concerns about the U.S.
deficit. The Chinese worry (as do many Americans) that, coupled with unusually
low interest rates, the deficit could trigger inflation. Inflation could devalue
China's significant holdings of U.S. debt, a stake that comprises a large part of
China's overall reserves.
China's anxieties about such a scenario have long been
well known. They surfaced noticeably during the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic
Dialogue in July when - as U.S. media reported prominently - China's Assistant
Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said: "China has a huge amount of investment
in the United States" and "we are concerned about the security of our financial
assets."
The good news, so far, is that inflation in the United States
has been negligible, a non-factor. Still, mindful of the Chinese government's
fears, U.S. officials gave some comfort to their counterparts at the dialogue
meetings in July, saying they would commit to polices that "reinforce and
sustain recent gains in private savings rates and will bring the fiscal deficit
down to a sustainable level by 2013" - both of which could keep inflation from
surging.
Indeed, the personal savings rate in the United States shot up
to 5 percent in the second quarter of this year, about twice as high as it was a
year before and higher than we've seen it this decade. That development is
likely a reaction to the shock of the recession over last year and to losses of
40 and 50 percent of the value of many Americans' personal retirement
portfolios. But the Obama Administration must, as it signaled at the dialogue,
do everything possible to keep the savings rate up after the economy recovers.
That will be difficult. The impulse to buy stuff, and
not to save, is deeply ingrained in the American social DNA. Also, speaking only
anecdotally, I'm not getting the sense that the experience of the current
recession will do for this generation of Americans what it did for those who
lived through Great Depression and, based on that searing experience, held fast
to the values of frugality ever since. But I hope I'm wrong about that.
China must be careful what it asks for, of course. China's
economy is export-driven, and the United States is its biggest consumer market.
Less spending might help keep inflation in check, but it could also mean less
demand over the long term for Chinese-made products.
The real trick, then, for the Obama Administration will
be to stimulate growth without triggering more inflation - one of the toughest
economic balancing acts any government can face. This result would of course
be good for the American economy itself. But it's also a necessary ingredient
of a well-functioning U.S.-China trade relationship, which is, in turn, critical
to the health of the global economy. Let's see what kind of a posture both
the United States and Chinese leaders signal in Pittsburgh.
Jeff Weintraub is the co-leader of the Washington,
D.C., public affairs practice of Fleishman-Hillard, a communications
consultancy.
(Source: China Daily)