Peter Mandelson, a Free Trader Till the Last

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in ,, at 2/16/2008 09:44:00 PM
With New Labour being buffeted here in the UK over all sorts of things--lost confidential data, Northern Rock, non doms, and I don't know what else--it's somewhat comforting to know that New Labour stalwart Peter Mandelson is still sticking to his free trade stance (schtick?), no matter what. Despite being hit left and right for his stance, Mandelson has stuck by his convictions, and that is worth admiring regardless of whether you are pro- or anti-free trade (or somewhere in between) in this age of the opinion poll manufactured politician. If the Doha Round is going down, he's going down swingin', baby. Carted off to Brussels to serve as the EU trade commissioner, Mandelson is still very much the champion of free trade, however quixotic that may appear to some. The Wall Street Journal recently interviewed the venerable Mr. Mandelson, and while his thoughts are very much in line with what you would expect, it's somewhat surprising that he has not softened his approach. First, here is Mandelson stating that the US is now the #1 threat to the free trade cause:

Yet more than France, Mr. Mandelson argues on a recent afternoon -- more so than any of the EU's 27 member states -- it is America that threatens the cause of free trade today.

"You can see it in the politics of the country," he says from his armchair in an EU office in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower. "You can see it in the Congress, you can see it in the primaries, you can see it in the town-hall meetings, you can see it in the candidates who, in order to appeal to the public, articulate these arguments" of protectionism.

"I don't see anywhere in Europe similar sentiments being expressed. I hear reservations about agriculture, or . . . about whether [trade] talks are balanced." But, he adds, "You'll not find anyone running for election in Europe and questioning whether we should complete the Doha round [of world trade talks]. You hear that from some of the candidates in the U.S., some of them from the Republican and the Democrat side."

Mandelson has this to note regarding the US and the deadlocked Doha round of WTO negotiations:

On this score, the Doha talks are critical. And, Mr. Mandelson argues, they are at a critical stage. Those who follow trade talks are used to hearing about deadline after deadline after deadline being missed. But American electoral politics may mean it's true this time.

"I was very struck during the ministerial meetings I held in Davos" last month, Mr. Mandelson says, "that nobody, actually, pushed back against the argument . . . that if we do not get a breakthrough and conclude the negotiations this year that they will go nowhere in 2009 with the change of the administration in the United States, and we'll be firmly in the long grass by 2010."

It's not just a matter of momentum but, again, of the potential successors to George W. Bush. Hillary Clinton, to name one leading contender, has called for a "timeout" on free-trade deals.

"The caveat is that we're in the primary season," Mr. Mandelson observes. "That's not necessarily a position she would take into the general election, and if she did it's not necessarily one she would take into the White House if she won. But you can't ignore it.

"I've known the Clintons for over a decade, and I've always seen them as free traders. But most of the Democrat free traders seem to have taken to the hills," he laments. "I wish there was more pushback within the Democrat Party, because they know this is right, they know this is responsible, and for a long time now you've seen politicians on both sides of the aisle using trade as a wedge issue. And it's a very dangerous wedge to play with, because it's short-term, it's counterproductive, it leads you nowhere."

If there's a reason for optimism, Mr. Mandelson says, it's that "amongst the Democrat candidates, the person who's been questioning free trade most loudly and showing support for protectionism has been forced out of the race -- John Edwards. And the Republican candidate who is most strongly in favor of free trade seems to be leading the field at the moment -- John McCain."

Meanwhile, he also has this to say on the chances of the Doha round being completed while Bush is still around and the EU side of the equation:

Still, counting on a Doha deal after the 2008 campaign is risky at best. So can the Bush administration deliver?

Mr. Mandelson pauses. Then he says, slowly, "I think the verbal commitment is strong. I think the presidential will is strong." Another pause. "But we've got to see some final offers from the United States . . . [that] show more flexibility, and more generosity" -- chiefly on trade-distorting subsidies to cotton, corn, sugar and other producers -- "in return for what I hope will be reciprocal moves by others where the U.S. has legitimate interests" -- i.e., industrial goods and services.

Farming has been at the heart of Doha disagreements from the start. Emerging nations such as Brazil and India refuse to open their markets further to industrial goods and services until they see movement from the U.S. on ag subsidies and Europe on farm-product tariffs. But it's time for these fast-growing economies to liberalize, he says, both for their own good and so that they can "pick up the slack . . . when the international economy is going through difficult times," as it is now.

During our discussion, Mr. Mandelson indicates that the EU may be able to move closer to a deal if it can gain greater recognition of its trademarks for specialized goods such as wines, meats and cheeses. Known in trade lingo as "geographic indications," these trademarks usually mean that a good cannot be sold with a certain name -- say, Manchego cheese from Spain, or Parma ham from Italy -- unless it comes from the area indicated in its name.

Free traders consider this a form of protectionism; more than 160 European cheeses are sheltered in this way, including 45 from France alone. Mr. Mandelson counters that Europe is already yielding on subsidies, tariffs and export refunds, and can't come out of these talks empty-handed. "When we're lose-lose-losing like that across the agricultural board, it's necessary to bring something back," he says. "I don't think that's too much to ask."

Last, Mandelson warns that if Doha goes into the abyss, the chances for other multilateral talks such as those on climate change being completed will dim significantly. Call it a bad climate for international cooperation:

The cost of failure in the talks would be staggering. "We will have failed to put a ratchet in place to stop the global economic machine's slipping backwards under protectionist pressures," Mr. Mandelson says. "I think that the confidence in the WTO amongst developing countries and emerging economies would be damaged. . . . But beyond that, I think the cause of multilateralism will be set back."

He then makes a prediction: "I can assure you, it will be harder to find agreement in the post-Kyoto negotiations [on climate change] if we've failed to do so in the multilateral trade talks." He says the weakening of multilateralism in general would mean "we'll virtually all be losers."

Not that there aren't losers and winners from liberalization, at least in the short term. Dealing with the problems that arise from any dislocations is part of what motivates this life-long Labourite now that he directs trade policy for the world's largest free-trade zone.

"I'm not a pure market liberal. I'm a social democrat," Mr. Mandelson says. "I believe in the power of the market, I believe in free trade, but I also believe in modern social and labor-market policies that maintain the dynamism which is indispensable to our economy but which also eases adjustment and manages that change in a way that is responsive to individuals and communities."

China's Booming Suburbs--Not Too Eco-Friendly

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in at 2/16/2008 09:18:00 PM
Overcrowding, overpricing, pollution, noise...what drives folks to move away from cities and into suburbs are pretty much the same the world over. Given that these negative factors have been turned up to the max in many Chinese cities, it should come as no surprise that city dwellers in the PRC are now turning to fast-growing suburban paradises and all that they entail. What's troubling according to the TIME article excerpted below is that building the Chinese equivalents of American McMansions (McForbidden Palaces?) will require even more resources on top of the infrastructure boom currently ongoing in China. Buy more BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto stock on dips, that's all I have to say:

For the past decade and a half, the frantic pace of urbanization has been the transformative engine driving this country's economy, as some 300-400 million people from dirt-poor farming regions made their way to relative prosperity in cities. Within the contours of that great migration, however, there is another one now about to take place — less visible, but arguably no less powerful. As China's major cities — there are now 49 with populations of one million or more, compared with nine in the U.S. in 2000 — become more crowded and more expensive, a phenomenon similar to the one that reshaped the U.S. in the aftermath of World War II has begun to take hold. That is the inevitable desire among a rapidly expanding middle class for a little bit more room to live, at a reasonable price; maybe a little patch of grass for children to play on, or a whiff of cleaner air as the country's cities become ever more polluted.

This is China's Short March. A wave of those who are newly affluent and firm in the belief that their best days, economically speaking, are ahead of them, is headed for the suburbs. In Shanghai alone, urban planners believe some 5 million people will move to what are called "satellite cities" in the next 10 years. To varying degrees, the same thing is happening all across China. This process — China's own suburban flight — is at the core of the next phase of this country's development, and will be for years to come.

The consequences of this suburbanization are enormous. Think of how the U.S. was transformed, economically and socially, in the years after World War II, when GIs returned home and formed families that then fanned out to the suburbs. The comparison is not exact, of course, but it's compelling enough. The effects of China's suburbanization are just beginning to ripple across Chinese society and the global economy. It's easy to understand the persistent strength in commodity prices — steel, copper, lumber, oil — when you realize that in Emerald Riverside construction crews used more than three tons of steel in the houses and nearly a quarter of a ton of copper wiring. There are 35 housing developments either just finished or still under construction in New Songjiang alone, a town in which 500,000 people will eventually live. And as Lu Hongjiang, a vice president of the New Songjiang Development & Construction company puts it, "we're only at the very beginning of this in China..."

Fallout from the Sudan-Spielberg Free-for-All

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in ,, at 2/16/2008 08:30:00 PM
It seems that activists are targeting more high-profile artists to back away from the Beijing Olympics according to this piece in the Guardian. As I mentioned earlier, this is as good time as any if drawing the attention of the normally insular Chinese officialdom is the objective:

Steven Spielberg was just the beginning. The Oscar-winning director's decision to resign as an artistic adviser to the Beijing Olympics this summer was a major victory for human rights groups working to shine an embarrassing international spotlight on China's role in the mass killings in Darfur.

But activists are not letting up, intensifying their focus on corporate sponsors of the Olympics and other celebrities lending their name to the games. The big names who remain on board the Beijing creative team include Quincy Jones, who said this week that he was reconsidering his deal to write the Olympics theme song, and film director Ang Lee, who censored his latest film for broadcast in China at the government's request.

"These people I know are under some pressure now to make a statement," said Jill Savitt, director of Dream for Darfur, which aims to push China into using its influence with the Sudanese government to end the brutal violence in the Darfur region.

"We saw this with Spielberg: it's not an intuitive issue," Savitt added. "How is China related to the Darfur genocide? ... There's a whole lot of activity going on, with these folks beginning to educate themselves."

Zhang Yimou, the Chinese-born director of action films Hero and Raise the Red Lantern, is also serving as an artistic adviser to the Olympics, and classical cellist Yo-Yo Ma plans to tour and perform during the Special Olympics in Shanghai. In the wake of Spielberg's withdrawal, campaigners are seeking more high-profile criticism of China for its continued weapons and oil sales to Sudan while Darfur is engulfed by violence.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) says that it isn't going to mix it with activists trying to get it to talk with the Chinese government over Darfur, stating (surprise!) the IOC is a sporting, not a political organization. Pressure tactics are also being mounted against MNC Olympic advertising sponsors. Can the MNCs really prod China on the Darfur matter? You need to disaggregate this question into (1) do these companies have real leverage on China? and (2) are they obligated to take up the issue of human rights with China? Thorny questions, indeed...

For the corporations that are linking their brand to the games, however, activists are using a different kind of pressure. Dream for Darfur met 19 Olympic sponsors in June, asking them to commit to four gestures, Savitt said.

When the group assembled a "report card" on the corporations' cooperation, 13 of the 19 got failing grades. General Electric earned a C-plus for simply noting China's friendship with the Sudanese regime during discussions with the International Olympic Committee. "Not exactly a profile in courage," Savitt said.

Despite the dismal performance from corporate sponsors such as Microsoft, McDonald's, and Coca-Cola, a second report card is forthcoming from the group. The requests are still simple: businesses are asked to meet the actor Mia Farrow, who played a major role in persuading Spielberg to withdraw from the games; contact UN officials about the status of peacekeepers in Darfur; and call for Sudanese officials who are under indictment at the international criminal court to be barred from the Olympics.

And any companies scoring below a C on the second report card will earn public demonstrations at their offices, Savitt vowed, most likely with survivors of Darfur. Another consequence will come in the form of a mass boycott of TV adverts run by the Olympic sponsors, a campaign called Turn Off For Darfur.

What does Dream for Darfur call for? The first set of objectives is, I believe, more reasonable. UNAMID is the United Nations / African Union Mission in Darfur, BTW:
China should use all the influence at its disposal to press the Sudanese government to a) permit the swift, full and effective deployment of UNAMID; b) implement the North-South peace deal and participate constructively in the Darfur peace process; and c) allow the unfettered delivery of humanitarian aid in Darfur and Eastern Chad. China will only pass this test once Sudan has acted accordingly in all three areas.
The second set are definitely in the "dream on" category, especially the first two points:
  1. Support punitive measures, such as UN Security Council targeted sanctions, against Khartoum officials, until peace and security for Darfur is achieved. UN targeted sanctions should be imposed immediately against government, rebel, or militia officials who are responsible for undermining UNAMID’s deployment, the North-South peace deal, or regional stability, such as attempting to overthrow the government in neighboring Chad.

  2. Verifiably suspend all military cooperation with the Khartoum regime, including weapons transfers, until peace and security for Darfur is achieved.

  3. Work with the United States, France, and the United Kingdom in a quartet supporting UN and African Union initiatives in Darfur, Southern Sudan, and Chad. This cooperative work on the peace process needs to be comprehensive. The problems of Darfur, Southern Sudan, and Chad are intertwined, so unless peace is advanced on all of these fronts it will be unlikely to be achieved on any of these fronts.
How is Chinese officialdom acting in response? One of the benefits of reading the Chinese press is that you know its line is not far from the Communist Party's, if nothing else. Here are the four key talking points from the China Daily, our favorite official publication:

Firstly, China has been working closely with the United Nations to resolve the Darfur crisis through political means, said the ambassador.

On July 31 last year, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1769, authorizing the deployment a hybrid UN and African Union (AU) force in Darfur, which marks a great achievement in the settlement of the crisis there.

China helped push forward the Sudanese government, the AU and the UN reaching consensus on the resolution on the hybrid force to Darfur, which did not come easily and our efforts have been applauded by the international community, Li said.

China also made proposals on the peaceful settlement of the Darfur issue, which were approved by various parties concerned.

What's more, last year when Sudan and the UN differed over the deployment of hybrid peacekeeping forces, China appointed Liu Guijin, a veteran diplomat as a special envoy on the issue, who traveled to Khartoum three times to persuade the Sudanese government to accept the UN resolution.

Liu also attended two peace talks on Darfur, and shuttled between the United States, major African countries, the UN, the AU, the Arab Union and the European Union, to facilitate the communication and coordination between various parties on the issue.

The Chinese government has also maintained sound communication with the Sudanese government, held discussions with it on the basis of respect for its sovereignty and territorial integrity. [This is not reassuring. It's the old line "we sold them weapons and it's really none of our business what they do with them."]

China sees to it that the concerns of the Sudanese government are heard, while conveying to the government the international community's concern over Darfur.

Secondly, China has actively participated in the hybrid peacekeeping efforts in Darfur upheld by the UN and the AU, and is the first non-African country to sent peacekeeping troops to the Darfur region.

China has promised to send a 315-strong engineering unit to Darfur. A 140-member advance troop arrived in Darfur last November, the first UN peacekeeping force there in the region, and more will be gradually deployed.

The Chinese engineering troops have been actively engaged in the construction and other works in the UN peacekeeping camps, their outstanding contribution there won them hearty praises from the locals, and UN officials there said Chinese peacekeeping forces are making miracles happen there [hyperbole, eh?].

Thirdly, in order to improve the humanitarian situation in Darfur, China has provided material assistance worth 80 million RMB (about 11 million U.S. dollars) to Darfur, 1.8 million U.S. dollars aid to African Union, and 500,000 U.S. dollars donation to the U.N. fund for solving Darfur issue, and Chinese firms have also offered help.

Fourthly, China also has encouraged entrepreneurs to help the development in the Darfur region.

In recent years, Chinese companies have helped dig 46 wells, build 20 small-scale power plants in Darfur and water supply projects in southern and northern Darfur states. Chinese companies also provided computer equipment and facilitated technical training in the region.

Therefore, as is obvious to anyone in the international community that is not biased against China, China has been playing its due part in helping resolve the Darfur issue, and that stance of China definitely deserves objective and just treatment, Li said.

Spielberg, Sudan, and the "Genocide Olympics"

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in ,, at 2/15/2008 02:34:00 AM
It seems that Steven Spielberg has been taken aback by the Chinese ruling regime's indifference to his efforts to prod it on Sudan. It seems this authoritarian regime is too Jurassic for Spielberg's liking. So, he has quit his role as an adviser to the 2008 Beijing Olympics. This, of course, is partly the culmination of Mia Farrow's efforts to get Spielberg to quit working on what she has called the "Genocide Olympics." I have covered the Farrow angle elsewhere [1, 2, 3, 4]. What remains notable is China's continuing wish to sweep Tibet, Sudan, human rights, press freedom etc. under the carpet as "politics." In the dialogue of Chinese officials, as far as I can gather, politics is anything distateful that will ruin China's Olympics. In its eyes, the Olympics is the coming out party of the PRC onto the world stage. If I were a human rights campaigner, I would absolutely use the Olympics as a maximum visibility stage to get my points across. It's too bad the Chinese have taken a largely oppositional stance here that will likely continue to dog it when the Games actually begin. File this one under the Than Shwe School of PR. From the International Herald Tribune comes this snippet:
The movie director Steven Spielberg has said he is withdrawing as an artistic adviser to the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing after almost a year of trying unsuccessfully to prod President Hu Jintao to do more to try to end Sudan's attacks in the Darfur region.

Spielberg's decision, and the public way he announced it Tuesday, was a blow to China, which has said that its relationship with Sudan should not be linked to the Olympics, which have become a source of national pride.

In a statement sent to the Chinese ambassador and the Beijing Olympic committee on Tuesday, Spielberg said that his "conscience will not allow me to continue with business as usual."

"Sudan's government bears the bulk of the responsibility for these ongoing crimes but the international community, and particularly China, should be doing more to end the continuing human suffering there," the statement said. "China's economic, military and diplomatic ties to the government of Sudan continue to provide it with the opportunity and obligation to press for change."

Responding to Spielberg's action, a spokesman at the Chinese Embassy in Washington said, "As the Darfur issue is neither an internal issue of China nor is it caused by China, it is completely unreasonable, irresponsible and unfair to link the two as one." Officials in Beijing did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

Spielberg had written to Hu about Darfur twice in the past 10 months, his spokesman said, taking China to task for its "silence" while Sudan blocked the deployment of international peacekeepers and expelled aid workers from the region.

In September, Spielberg also met with China's special envoy to Darfur at the Chinese mission to the United Nations, said Spielberg's spokesman, Andy Spahn.

None of those efforts yielded the results Spielberg wanted, Spahn said. In the meantime, Spielberg had come under increasing pressure from activists working on Darfur, including a campaign by the actress Mia Farrow, to drop his association with the Beijing Olympics.

After receiving word that Spielberg had done just that, Farrow was jubilant.

"His voice and all of the moral authority it gives, used this way, brings a shred of hope to Darfur, and God knows, rations of hope are meager at this time," said Farrow, a good-will ambassador for Unicef who helped start a campaign last year to label the games in Beijing the "Genocide Olympics."

The actor Don Cheadle, a co-founder of Not On Our Watch, a Darfur advocacy group, said he hoped that Spielberg's actions would force China to rethink its position. "One guy like Steven in a position like that is like 100 other guys," he said. "Those are the kinds of moves, that if they catch fire, and other people think of boycotting, or refraining, the cumulative effect could be something that potentially could change the calculation of that government."

From TIME, the Chinese added this:

China is blaming activists with "ulterior motives" for linking the Beijing Olympics to the nation's involvement in Sudan, with top officials saying they shared concerns over the humanitarian crisis in Darfur...

China is believed to have influence over the Islamic regime because it buys two-thirds of the country's oil exports while selling it weapons and defending it in the United Nations.

In their first response to Spielberg's announcement, Games organizers said his decision would not affect planning for the opening and closing ceremonies, adding: "We express our regret over his recent personal statement."

"The Chinese government has made unremitting efforts to resolve the Darfur issue, an obvious fact to the international community which holds unprejudiced opinions on this issue," the organizers, known as BOCOG, said in a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press.

"Linking the Darfur issue to the Olympic Games will not help to resolve this issue and is not in line with the Olympic Spirit that separates sports from politics," BOCOG said.

China is on the defensive against critics using the Games to spotlight the communist regime's curbs on human rights, press freedoms, and religion.

"It is understandable if some people do not understand the Chinese government policy on Darfur," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said. "But I am afraid that some people may have ulterior motives, and this we cannot accept."

Liu said China was working with the United Nations to resolve the Darfur crisis.

"China is also concerned about the humanitarian crisis there, but we have been playing a positive and constructive role in promoting peace in Darfur," he said.

Liu said China supported a hybrid African Union and United Nations force to patrol Darfur.

"This did not come easily and our efforts have been applauded by the international community," Liu said.

Liu said 140 Chinese engineers helped prepare the hybrid force and Chinese companies in Sudan had helped dig wells and build small-scale power plants in Darfur.

"On the issue of Darfur, empty rhetoric will not help," Liu said. "What is more important is to do more things to help with the peace process there and alleviate the humanitarian crisis..."

China Loses to US in WTO Auto Parts Case

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in ,, at 2/13/2008 10:17:00 PM
In case you missed it, WTO Dispute Settlement case #339 has gone against China. This case concerns auto parts exports by the US, EU, and Canada to China for which Chinese authorities levied tariffs equivalent to those for complete automobiles. (The tariff rate that is supposed to be applied to auto parts is significantly lower than that for complete vehicles. Also note that the EU was the original complainant against China; the US latched on afterwards.) Reuters has a brief summary here:
The United States has won a preliminary ruling in a World Trade Organization case over Chinese tax policies that restrict imports of foreign auto parts, a U.S. trade official said on Wednesday.

"We can confirm that, in all major respects, the panel has agreed with the United States that China has acted inconsistently with its WTO commitments," the U.S. trade official said in response to press reports on a confidential interim report released in Geneva.

The final report in the case is expected to be made public by the second or third quarter of this year. The case would be China's first loss at the WTO.

The United States and the European Union filed the case in March 2006 and were later joined by Canada. They complained that China's tax treatment of foreign auto imports discouraged Chinese automobile manufacturers from using them...

Once a final report is issued, China would have the opportunity to appeal the decision...

Canadian Trade Minister David Emerson said the ruling, if upheld, would come at a crucial time for the ailing domestic auto parts industry, which needs to expand its "hundreds of millions" worth of exports to China to stay competitive.

"It's a market that's growing and with our companies in such tough shape right now a growing market is critically important to restoring health to our own auto parts industry."

Meanwhile, Max Baucus has hailed this ruling, as you would expect:
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont) today welcomed a World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute panel’s initial finding that Chinese auto parts import policies violate WTO rules. The panel found that the Chinese policies discriminate against imported auto parts – from the U.S., for instance – and unfairly favor Chinese auto parts suppliers.

“Vigorous enforcement is the linchpin of our trading system. When we enforce WTO rules, markets open and our workers prosper,” said Baucus. “This decision is a victory for open markets and American workers.”

The auto parts dispute was brought to the WTO by the United States, the European Communities, and Canada in 2006. The three parties contended that China’s taxes on imported auto parts discourage automobile manufacturers in China from using imported auto parts in the assembly of vehicles. These regulations discriminate against imported auto parts in favor of Chinese-manufactured parts. A final panel decision is expected in March, after which China may appeal or comply with the decision.
Can auto parts manufacturers in the US, EU, and Canada ensure their survival by exporting their wares to China, or will Chinese auto parts manufacturers themselves be more than competitive? Stay tuned. This is the second straight victory for the US over China in trade disputes after getting it to back down in the subsidies case (DS 358).

Will Asia Decouple from the US Slowdown?

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in ,, at 2/13/2008 12:18:00 AM
Is Asia going to decouple from the ongoing slowdown led by United States? The IMF's latest thoughts on the topic suggest it cannot. What becomes the question, then, is to what extent Asia will be struck by "collateral damage." The chart to the left indicates that, if anything else, the dependence of developing Asia on external markets is much higher in 2006 than in 1990. I am of two minds about this. There is no doubt that any number of Asian economies are very much export-driven. Yet, there are also possibilities not alluded to in many analyses such as those for creating domestic demand. Japan certainly won't become the next hot consumer market, but what about China, India, etc.? Ah, enough conjecture. Here is the IMF blurb:

What are the implications of growing interdependence among economies in emerging Asia?
1. Decoupling is unlikely.
Given the increasing share of intra-regional trade, it may be tempting to argue that emerging Asia can decouple from the global economy. However, this is likely not the case. Developed economies outside the region remain the main destination of final good exports by emerging Asia. Indeed, the exposure of Asian economies to inter-regional exports has actually increased over the past 15 years (see Chart 2).


Indeed, it doesn't look like very encouraging stuff. Also, here are a few articles from the reliable Financial Times on the whole decoupling thingamajig. First, it writes that while US demand for Asian exports may be slowing, Europe may be taking up some of the slack (likely due to the increased buying power of the stronger euro and pound):

Asia’s export-dependent economies are hoping that decoupling – the notion that the rest of the world can grow even with the US in recession – will hold true.

There have been signs. Over the past year, Japanese shipments to China have risen by 15 per cent, to Europe and other Asian nations by 11.5 per cent, and to the “rest of world”, including the oil-flush Middle East, by 25 per cent.

Still, exports to the US have been fading fast, down 1.7 per cent on the year, and because Japan’s eagerly awaited recovery in domestic demand has never materialised, its economy has been running on only one (export-led) engine. This fiscal year its economy is expected to grow by what analysts describe as a disappointing 1.3 per cent.

Peter Morgan, chief economist for Asia Pacific at HSBC, says that one of the chinks in decoupling’s armour is Europe.

The region has been happily sucking in Asian imports thanks to its strong currency and reasonably good economic performance. But as Asian currencies appreciate, against the euro as well as the dollar, and European economies slow, that will change. “That is going to take away one of the legs of the stool,” he says.

Second, China may actually be welcoming a respite from so many consecutive years of double-digit export-led growth:

Behind the headline forecasts of decelerating Chinese output in 2008 lies a more significant trend that may mark a long-awaited turning point for the economy and its global impact.

Chinese and World Bank economists have significantly downgraded forecasts for China’s national growth in recent weeks – from 11.4 per cent in 2007 to maybe two percentage points lower this year...

The Chinese government, far from being alarmed at such a turnaround in growth, would largely welcome it.

The slowdown could dovetail with Beijing’s own aims to moderate the contentious trade surplus and, at the same time, recalibrate growth away from heavy industry in favour of consumption and services.

“If China is able to rebalance the economy, making it less intensive in resources and capital, cleaner and more widely shared, growth of 9-10 per cent a year for long periods would be the [outcome] developing countries across the world are looking for,” said Louis Kuijs of the World Bank in Beijing.

The surge of recent years in investment in heavy industry, such as steel, aluminium and cement, has strained energy resources, contributed hugely to greenhouse gas emissions and pollution and created few jobs.

Such a cocktail is anathema to Chinese leaders, who face pressure at home to create more jobs – especially with exports in relative decline – and from abroad to tackle carbon emissions.

“Five of the largest heavy industries account for over 40 per cent of the country’s energy demand yet, combined, they employ fewer people than the service sector in Guangdong province alone, and fewer people than they did a decade ago,” said Trevor Houser, a visiting fellow with the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Last, the Indian economy is also poised for a slowdown after years of breakneck growth:

India’s economy, an increasingly important engine of global growth, is slowing rapidly for the first time in three years, according to government statistics released on Thursday, prompting economists to cut forecasts for the coming year.

India’s growth rate for the year to March 2008 will be 8.7 per cent, down from 9.6 per cent the previous year, the government’s statistics office said on Thursday, reflecting the dual impact of an appreciating rupee and sharp monetary tightening...

Private economists studying India have also become less bullish about its growth prospects. Citigroup, which had forecast 9.3 per cent growth for the country this year, slashed its growth forecast for next year to 8.3 per cent from 9 per cent, blaming a deteriorating global environment and the likelihood of single-digit export growth.

Sonal Varma, an economist at Lehman Brothers in Mumbai, said the bank’s forecast of 8.8 per cent growth next year faced downside risks from “weakening global growth, tight domestic monetary conditions and increased financial turbulence”.

Other banks have been expecting an even sharper tailing off in India’s growth rates, with Morgan Stanley forecasting GDP growth of 7.4 per cent next year and 7.8 per cent in the year to March 2010.

Don't Offend the Chinese, America's Real Owners

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in , at 2/12/2008 01:48:00 AM
Yeah! I am warming up to these corporate types in China rather quickly with this latest spat over US national security concerns (i.e., protectionism). Whenever there is a cause for concern that national security interests are being compromised by foreign investment, the US government calls on the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS) to investigate. Our good man Ben Muse has more than you'll ever need to know about the CFIUS.

Anyway, back to the case in question. Back in September 2007, US private equity firm Bain Capital and Chinese telecommunications gear manufacturer Huawei mounted a $2.2B bid for US firm 3Com. However, this proposed purchase met with opposition over high technology with potential security implications being forked over to the Chinese. You know, those folks who are often caught sending spies over to steal US tech secrets. The ever-so-conservative Washington Times had the following to say about the impending deal back in October of 2007:

Treasury's committee needs to take a careful look at this merger, because what is already known about the deal is deeply troubling. The firm in question, Huawei Technologies, has been linked to illegal high-tech exports to Saddam Hussein's regime and the supply of telecommunications equipment to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan. Huawei wants to join with 3Com, which provides the Pentagon and the Army with intrusion-detection equipment to keep hackers out. The deal follows a July computer attack on the Pentagon that U.S. intelligence officials say involved Chinese military hackers who were found breaking into (among other things) a system close to Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

Huawei, founded by a Chinese military officer in 1988, got its start building military communications networks. "Huawei is up to its eyeballs with the Chinese military," a Pentagon official told Bill Gertz of The Washington Times. A second Pentagon official said the deal is taking place at a time when the Pentagon has mounted an aggressive effort to stop computer intrusions from Chinese hackers and spies: "And now we are proposing to sell the PLA [the People's Liberation Army, as the Chinese military is called] a key to our front door. This is a very dangerous trend."

Nouriel Roubini once made the point that, given America's free-spending and savings-free ways, it is inevitable that bigger and bigger chunks of the US will have to be sold off to fund an addiction to McMansions, SUVs, and flat screen TVs. What is galling to me is that so much of a stink is being made over a relatively small $363 million stake by the Chinese firm. Here is the punch line from the Financial Times:

The Chinese company participating in the planned buy-out of a US telecoms equipment maker has angrily rounded on US politicians who claim the deal could endanger US national security.

Xu Zhijun, chief marketing officer at Huawei Technologies, told the Financial Times that the concerns expressed by some US lawmakers were “bullshit”.

He added there was no need to change the terms of the $2.2bn deal, under which Bain Capital, the US private equity firm, is seeking to buy 83.5 per cent of 3Com, the US network equipment maker, with Huawei taking the remaining 16.5 per cent.

The deal has sparked concerns in the US because 3Com supplies intrusion prevention technology to the US defence department, designed to protect the Pentagon against cyber attack. The Pentagon believes that hackers in China conducted a massive cyber attack on its systems last year.

Thaddeus McCotter, chairman of the Republican policy committee in the House of Representatives, last month urged US authorities to deny Huawei any part in the 3Com deal, describing the existing buy-out proposal as a “stealth assault on America’s national security”.

Asked about the concerns that the deal could endanger US national security, Mr Xu said through an interpreter: “That would be bullshit.” Pressed to clarify his remarks further, Mr Xu added: “Because we only just take 16.5 per cent.”

When Asked what message he had for US lawmakers who voiced concerns about the deal, Mr Xu said Cisco, the leading US network equipment maker, supplied products to Chinese telecoms companies: “Cisco’s equipment is everywhere in China.

“If the US government is concerned about Huawei, if some of the lawmakers are concerned about Huawei, Cisco is everywhere within China. Who should be more concerned?”

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which can block sensitive inward investment, is due to complete its scrutiny of the deal before the end of the month.

Mr Xu stressed that Huawei would be a minority shareholder at 3Com, with no final decision making powers, even if it exercised an option to raise its stake to 21.5 per cent.

He also insisted the Chinese government had no influence over Huawei, adding Beijing was not a shareholder. He described Huawei as a “private enterprise” that was owned by its 20,000 employees.

The People’s Liberation Army is one of Huawei’s customers, and Mr Xu confirmed that Ren Zhengfei, Huawei’s founder and chief executive, was a former PLA officer.

Mr Xu described the rationale behind Huawei’s role in the 3Com deal as a “business investment” from which it hoped to get “investment returns”.

As Roubini suggests, the only way to avoid furriners buying ever larger chunks of America is to get US finances in order. With $170 billion giveaway packages to further fund the US jihad on fiscal sanity (and whose proceeds probably end up in China anyway), nobody is counting on that to happen soon. US deficits from here to Chongqing will only see to it that more and more of America is sold off. Enough with this protectionist nonsense. This is free trade, pal: if the US wants more borrowed time, it had better be prepared to give up this "national security" jive talking. The real owners of the US are in the PRC. Deal with it.

Structurally Adjusting the IMF, Continued

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in at 2/12/2008 12:27:00 AM
A few moons ago, I described the need for the IMF to structurally adjust itself as very few developing countries are borrowing from it. Without interest income to fund its operations due to a shortage of loans outstanding, the IMF has fallen under hard times, indeed. I almost missed this, but the Economist has more news on the recent fate of the controversial institution. It has already laid off 380 staff members, and the axe may fall on yet more employees. Sell off the gold stash, perhaps? It seems austerity measures are much in vogue in DC. From arch-villain of globalization to rather irrelevant international organization in the space of a mere decade. It's funny how things have changed at the IMF:

And just as he is touting stimulus abroad, [IMF Director-General] Strauss-Kahn is demanding austerity at home. For the IMF finds itself in a big fiscal hole. Its $1 billion budget is traditionally funded by the small profit it makes on lending money to cash-strapped countries. But IMF lending has collapsed in recent years as developing countries have improved their economic management. As a result, the fund looks set to run a deficit of some $400m a year for the foreseeable future.

The organisation still has a fat cushion of reserves to draw on, but clearly its business model needs to change. Last year a group of “wise men” suggested creating an endowment to fund the IMF's expenses by selling some of its large gold stocks. Such a move requires the approval of the fund's member countries, which means a vote by America's Congress. Mr Strauss-Kahn, it seems, reckons he has a better chance of achieving that if the IMF develops its own cost-control plans quickly.

So the fund is downsizing. Some $100m is to be saved by getting rid of 380 staff, a reduction of around 15%. Preliminary documents obtained by The Economist suggest big cuts in most departments, and particularly among managers. Many departments, it seems, need to reduce their headcount of “B” level staff by 30-40%.

Addressing employees this week, Mr Strauss-Kahn said he hoped many departures would be voluntary. Few insiders think that is likely: the pay-offs, they moan, are too stingy, and with financial markets in turmoil, alternative employment options look grim. But for outsiders it is hard to resist a wry smile. The dispensers of fiscal rectitude are finally getting a taste of their own medicine.

BP and CSR: A Star-Crossed Relationship

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in , at 2/11/2008 04:18:00 AM
Bloomberg columnist Ann Woolner has an interesting op-ed on the trials and tribulations of British Petroleum with regard to corporate social responsibility (CSR). While the company has some high-profile projects trumpeting its good eco-deeds, it has neglected less PR-friendly opportunities to make good--one of which has turned into a fatal PR fiasco. On the positive side:
When it comes to doing something good about global warming, London-based oil company BP Plc is the industry pioneer.

True, that doesn't say much.

``I don't think you can call any oil company a green company,'' says Andrew Logan of Ceres, a Boston-based coalition of environmental advocates and investors.

Groups such as Ceres that rate companies for doing the right thing give BP credit for investing in less-polluting fuels and for acknowledging a decade ago that carbon emissions can hurt the planet. They have acclaimed BP as the very model of social responsibility.

On the negative side, though, comes this well-known tragedy:

This week, BP became a pioneer of quite another sort. The company's U.S. division admitted in federal court in Houston to an attitude toward the environment so cavalier as to be criminal.

BP's unit has the distinction of becoming the first and only company prosecuted under a 1990 Clean Air Act amendment.

The air wasn't all that BP harmed.

Because of the company's keen attention to cost-cutting and a blasé approach to safety, deteriorated equipment set off a massive 2005 explosion at its Texas City, Texas, refinery.

Fifteen workers died, hundreds more were injured and walls cracked for miles around. The company last year paid a record $21 million civil fine to the feds for worker-safety violations...

Ralph Dean appeared in court this week to tell his story to the judge. Explaining that Dean himself gets ``too emotional'' to speak, his lawyer read Dean's statement about watching, seat- belted, from his forklift as a fireball knocked down and then destroyed the trailer where his wife and their fathers were working.

Dean dug through the wreckage, finding body after body, until he located his wife. She barely survived, albeit with permanent burn scars on her lungs. Both their fathers died.

``BP's true motto is ``Human life means nothing. Money means everything,''' Becky Linsenbardt, who was widowed by the explosion, told the judge.

Eva Rowe lost both parents, her mother decapitated, her father's bloody face still streaked from tears when she went to the morgue to identify his body. The daughter, 20 when the plant blew up, told the judge that pollution is the least of BP's crimes.

``BP's greed murdered 15 people,'' she said.

I suppose it's up to companies if they want to make longer-term commitments to CSR and see if financial benefits can be gained from doing so. While these efforts should be welcomed, companies should still cover the bases for what constitutes good corporate practice in everyday matters. Cost-cutting by reducing safety considerations can definitely backfire bigtime as with the case of BP's Texas plant, likely negating the good BP has done with its eco-friendly power initiatives.

Will the US Go for Diesel Cars?

♠ Posted by Emmanuel in , at 2/11/2008 04:04:00 AM
Here in Europe, diesel automobiles outsell those that run on gasoline. Not only are they more economical, but they offer torquey motors that attract auto enthusiasts. Now, the question is whether American prejudices against diesel can be surmounted as top German marques such as Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Audi take their diesel-powered luxury offerings on an Atlantic crossing. From the BBC:

In a country where the "filthy fuel" is generally reviled, most would not even consider buying a diesel-powered family vehicle.

And yet, in spite of such extreme distrust in - or disgust with - diesel, European auto makers are preparing a massive onslaught of diesel-powered models that they say will help cut fuel bills and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by up to 25%.

This year, for the first time, diesel-powered cars that meet the emissions regulations in all 50 states will arrive in the US, says Stefan Krause, BMW's executive director in charge of sales and marketing, in an interview with BBC News.

"If you point out the environmental friendliness of these cars and if you point out that it's more cost effective than petrol, then high performance diesels will be accepted," he predicts.

Dieter Zetsche, chief executive of Daimler, which owns Mercedes-Benz, agrees.

"We are very bullish about the prospects for diesel in this country," he tells BBC News.

Consequently, a growing number of industry observers agree with the claims made by manufacturers of diesel-powered cars: "Diesels can produce enormous improvements in the short-term," according to Paul Ingrassia, author of Comeback: The Fall and Rise of the American Automobile Industry.

The emergence of so-called "clean diesel" has taken Europe by storm and now outsells petrol pretty much across the board.

Diesel now accounts for more than half of all new cars sold in Europe, and only a quarter of luxury car buyers in Europe choose petrol engines, though this is largely because of tax rules that favour diesel.

In the US, meanwhile, diesel has yet to rise above a single-digit market share in any segment, though there are early signs that wealthy drivers, who are more likely to choose cars made by non-US manufacturers, are keen to embrace the fuel.

"Where we offer diesel it accounts for 20% of sales," observes Daimler's Mr Zetsche.

"Mercedes is now going for more and more diesel in the US," he adds, and so are its main European rivals, Audi and BMW.