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Pander hugging, panda baiting

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

In recent weeks, a trend in the US Democratic primaries has been the increased tough talk on globalization and its effects on America’s manufacturing sector. This is a topic - surprise, surprise - that strikes chords in states like Ohio. Senators Obama and Clinton have been one-upping each other in speeches and debates on the virtues of protectionism and the evils of NAFTA (though Obama reportedly sent signals to the Canadian government to reassure them that, hey, it’s all just campaign talk to win the nomination - pandering is the name of the game**).

So where do the candidates stand on China? We learn from The Nation’s Campaign ‘08 blog (via the China Law Blog*) that, when asked by a coalition of labor, agricultural and environmental groups what they would do about “China’s unfair advantage over Ohio workers and manufacturers,” Obama said:

“I recognize that China’s currency manipulation and domestic subsidies gives it an unfair trade advantage and has led to U.S. job losses. The Bush administration has utterly failed to address this growing threat to U.S. businesses. I am committed to tackling this problem and ensuring that all trade manipulations are addressed by the U.S. government. I have cosponsored tough legislation in the U.S. Senate to overhaul the U.S. process for determining currency manipulation and authorize new enforcement measures so countries like China cannot continue to get a free pass for undermining fair trade principles. I have also supported proposals to increase tariffs on Chinese goods in order to offset the advantage their goods receive due to currency manipulation. As president, I will immediately adopt a strong program to push the Chinese toward voluntary reform – a goal that is possible with the right leadership in Washington.”

Manipulation talk. “Tough” legislation. A “strong program” to “push the Chinese” toward “voluntary reform.” So far, sounds like a typical member of Congress to me, albeit with the slightly mixed image of pushing someone to do something voluntarily.

Here’s what Mrs. Clinton said:

“The Bush administration has failed to make China play by the rules. Consequently, our workers – particularly those in manufacturing states like Ohio – have paid a price. That is why as President, I will crack down on China’s unfair trade practices. I have co-sponsored the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act, which will require the administration to take definitive steps to stop China and other countries from harming American interests by undervaluing their currencies. And because currency manipulation is contributing to the trade deficit, I have also co-sponsored legislation that will require the administration to address the ballooning trade deficit. As President, I will make enforcement of trade agreements a priority. To that end, I will appoint a trade enforcement officer and double the enforcement staff at the Office of the United States Trade Representative. The current staff is too small to monitor and enforce the increasingly complex trade agreements.”

Her answer, true to form, is wonkier and emphasizes specific experience more than Obama’s, but it sounds like the same tune to these ears.

Do either (or both) of them mean what they say? No word so far on whether Team Obama has slipped a back-channel note through to placate Hu Jintao (although if he did, that sounds like something that the Chinese, unlike the Canadians, would keep to themselves for now). To be sure, this was almost certainly not aimed at a Chinese audience, but people in the PRC will be taking note of what these candidates say. Or at least they will at some point - certainly after they’re through being bombarded with news reports from the National People’s Congress.

The pattern in past elections has been that candidates who talk tough on China soften their tone once they get into the White House (see: Clinton, William J.). Will that hold true this year? It will be interesting to watch, especially around Olympics time, when George W. Bush comes to Beijing (as a “sports fan,” he helpfully points out). Campaign talk is one thing, but if the (hopefully nominated by then) Democratic candidate goes too far in denouncing Bush’s visit - say, by getting caught up in “genocide games” rhetoric - well, that might be harder to take back.

* Geeky aside to China Law Blog’s Dan Harris: We love your blog, but we love our RSS reader as well. Please, oh please, consider a feed not powered by the blocked-in-China Feedburner.

** Update: According to Canada’s own Globe and Mail, Obama isn’t the only one seeking to reassure the neighbors to the north:

Mr. Brodie, during the media lockup for the Feb. 26 budget, stopped to chat with several journalists, and was surrounded by a group from CTV.

The conversation turned to the pledges to renegotiate the North American free-trade agreement made by the two Democratic contenders, Mr. Obama and New York Senator Hillary Clinton.

Mr. Brodie, apparently seeking to play down the potential impact on Canada, told the reporters the threat was not serious, and that someone from Ms. Clinton’s campaign had even contacted Canadian diplomats to tell them not to worry because the NAFTA threats were mostly political posturing.

China this week: IPOs, international politics

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Highlights from the last week of China business news.

IPO safe havens
The A-share market isn’t doing so well these days, and regulators have their hands full. It wasn’t so long ago that the CSRC was encouraging mega-IPOs to soak up liquidity in the soaring A-share markets. Now, they’re saying the opposite, telling Ping An, for example, to cut back its planned share and bond offering. Investors are piling into IPOs and ditching buying on the secondary market, as China Railway Construction Group’s US$3.1 billion Shanghai listing proved - the retail tranche was 155 times oversubscribed. The chronically underpowered SEPA actually aided the CSRC by delaying 10 domestic listings last year due to non-compliance with environmental rules. Two of the companies seeking listings have yet to be approved for IPOs.

Pitching in
Everyone needs China’s help these days. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice came to Beijing to ask President Hu Jintao to exert more pressure on recalcitrant neighbor North Korea to get rid of its nuclear program. There’s also Sudan, China’s troublesome trading partner. The Chinese special envoy has been dispatched to the country to find a solution to its ongoing civil strife (some say genocide). If you remember, he got on the plane just days after Steven Spielberg (who did Schindler’s List - and ET) quit his advisory role with BOCOG to escape being tarred by the genocide brush. As the Sudan-Olympics-genocide pressure builds, China will be looking for ways to relieve the pain. One of those remedies is to resume bilateral human rights talks with the US: during Rice’s visit, China said it was interested in doing just that. We speculate that this announcement probably didn’t rank among the personal highlights of the meeting for President Hu.

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China this week: Spielberg quits, investment shenanigans

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Highlights from the last week of China business news.

What does BOCOG pay its PR guys?
Call the spin doctors. It’s been a rough week for BOCOG, starting with Steven Spielberg’s decision to quit his job as an unpaid artistic consultant for the Olympics. “My conscience will not allow me to continue with business as usual,” he said, damningly, to the Wall Street Journal. The Chinese foreign ministry and BOCOG predictably countered with a statement saying that his move was against the “Olympic spirit.” The ministry then announced that a special envoy would be sent to Darfur - good timing to quell the bad PR. Yesterday the SCMP (subscription required) reported that 15,000 Beijingers have been moved to make way for Olympics venues - that’s the official figure, anyway. Last year, an NGO in Geneva estimated that 1.5 million Beijing residents would be evicted to make way for the games.

Dicey dealings
All kinds of M&A activity this week. Singapore Airlines confirmed it wouldn’t bid again for a stake in China Eastern, following a foiled attempt in January. CITIC and Bear Stearns are renegotiating their share-swap deal, with both sides deciding to increase their stakes in one another. Under the new terms, CITIC would become Bear’s largest single shareholder, with 9.9% of the US investment bank, while Bear would hold 7.5% in CITIC. The increased stakes were needed because both banks’ stock prices had fallen since the original deal was struck. The share-swap is pending regulatory approval. They will hope that this doesn’t end up like another high-profile deal, in which Huawei and Bain have abandoned their attempt to buy 3Com for US$2.2 billion after failing to overcome opposition from a US government vetting body. The body, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, had national security concerns about the acquisition.

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Understanding China’s forex reserves

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

James Fallows has an excellent article in the just-posted January/February issue of The Atlantic that examines the complex and often misunderstood issues surrounding China’s mountain of US-dollar reserves. It is probably the most patient, jargon-free and, above all, clearest explanation of the issue I have read.

Among the issues elucidated are what China’s high savings rate means (and doesn’t mean), the prickly situation created by the plunging dollar, and the challenges ahead for CIC, China’s new sovereign wealth fund charged with investing some US$200 billion of that money (a third of which is to be invested overseas). The article, which can be found here (on the free portion of the site, for once), is especially helpful in highlighting the potentially very dangerous co-dependent nature of the Chinese and American economies. Well worth a read.

China this week: Prosperity without transparency, a military reshuffle

Friday, October 12th, 2007

Highlights from the last week of China business news: Billionaires galore in two rich lists released this week; new major military postings, apparently with a conflict in Taiwan in mind.

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Is George W. Bush setting a precedent by attending the ‘Genocide Games?’

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Eric Reeves, a Smith College professor who campaigns tirelessly for Sudan issues, sent us an e-mail some time ago with a link to his latest New Republic story, headlined “Genocide Games.” He makes a few interesting points, some of them quite revelatory, at least for me.

Some of you may remember that President Bush accepted President Hu’s invitation to attend the Beijing Games next year during the APEC summit in Sydney earlier this month. Reeves says this would make Bush the first US president to attend an Olympics Games outside America.

Despite the controversy, President Bush announced last week that he will attend the Games. It’s an unprecedented move–apparently no American president has ever attended an Olympic Games held abroad–and China’s human rights violations make Bush’s decision seem all the more unwarranted.

Let’s see … Chelsea Clinton attended Sydney 2000 in lieu of her dad, Hillary attended Atlanta in ‘96, H.W. Bush didn’t attend Barcelona in ‘92 (not totally sure on that… but can’t find anything on Google that says otherwise)… so the last two presidents didn’t go to the Olympics. George W. didn’t go to Athens in ‘04, either - too busy clearing brush and duking it out with John Kerry, we assume.

But according to the IHT, Franklin Roosevelt attended - of all games - the Berlin Games in 1936. We can’t find any other sources that confirm the fact, though. So is Reeves right or wrong? It’s quite possible that he is right, because the Olympics always fall on the year of a presidential election, but Bush’s schedule will likely be freer than most. Unlike every president since Lyndon Johnson (and most before him), doesn’t have a horse in next year’s race - it will be the first time since 1968 that neither an incumbent president or his vice president has run. It would have been difficult for Roosevelt to get away from campaigning to go to Berlin by ship for the games. Now, if Reeves is right, why does Bush want to set such a precedent in Beijing? Why risk a potentially embarrassing PR backlash if, say, Falungong activists are arrested in Beijing during the games? It’s all very strange.

China this week: Hu gets plaudits at APEC, the latest macro numbers

Friday, September 14th, 2007

Highlights from the last week of China business news: China comes off smelling like roses at the APEC summit in Sydney, much to Bush’s chagrin; the latest macro numbers are out, and inflation isn’t getting any lower. (more…)

Weekly news roundup: Mattel’s recalls, China and the subprime crisis

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Highlights from the last week of China business news: Mattel toy recalls escalate the product safety issue; China’s forex reserves are safe - for now.

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Weekly news roundup: Paulson’s back, SOE mergers

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

Highlights from the last week of China business news: Paulson’s latest visit (no prizes for guessing what he talked about. Starts with an R and ends with a ‘enminbi’); state-owned steel and auto giants get leaner, but not without dieting problems.

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Weekly news roundup: More antifreeze toothpaste, banks caught in hanky panky

Friday, July 6th, 2007

Highlights from the last week of China business news:

Japan finds 5 million tubes of Chinese antifreeze toothpaste and promptly recalls them; a number of august banks get caught fueling the mainland’s stock and property markets with illegal loans and hot money.

Read on for the details .

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