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    China Business
     Jun 12, 2007
Page 1 of 2
China-US: A long, hot summer
By Benjamin A Shobert

WASHINGTON - In what promises to be a long, hot summer, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's recent defense of the second Beijing-Washington Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) seems to suggest how profound the disconnect is between the Bush administration and the mood of the US public and Congress regarding relations with China.

Last week, Paulson defended the SED and cautioned against



what he saw as the greater danger of Congress and the "strong protectionist tide" that is currently gaining momentum on Capitol Hill.

Paulson's comments have to be seen against the broader tapestry of the historical model of engagement between China and the United States, a policy unlikely to be changed by the administration of President George W Bush, but very much at odds with the mood of the American people and their most recently elected representatives in Congress.

Paulson's comments during a speech last Tuesday at the traditionally conservative Heritage Foundation continues to reflect an almost faith-based precept that criticizing more fundamental problems with China's adherence to global norms of accountability has the potential to upset the apple-cart and is to be avoided at all costs.

After decades of normalized relationships between Beijing and Washington, it strikes many observers as hollow that Paulson would again make reference to the need to be patient and "build relationships". Absent the executive arm of the US government, the growing majority of legislators believe enough relationships have already been built with China and sufficient time has certainly been granted. The continued statements from the administration referencing the need for patience and "smaller, deliberate steps" are falling on increasingly deaf ears as more people in the US begin to believe that whatever relationships need to be built already have been, and what must now happen is accountability to existing agreements, not avoidance of confrontation.

For Capitol Hill, Paulson's latest speech comes on the heels of one of the more eventful periods for Sino-US relations, perhaps more significant even than last year's much-lauded visit of President Hu Jintao to the United States. As the dust settles, it will become increasingly clear that the past several weeks represent a pivotal moment when the economic and political concerns of the two countries may have begun to become no longer mutually beneficial; the US elevating China as a scapegoat to its economic woes, and China perceiving US efforts to open its society further as a threat to its fragile unitary political power base.

US politicians are aware that they gained little if anything from the recent SED, and the consensus in Washington that China needs to be reminded of the United States' greater economic and geopolitical clout is beginning to grow. Paulson obviously resents such a conclusion and believes it is predicated only on crass political motives, stating that "the task of the SED is long-term, and that is difficult in a town where short-termism is the order of the day". It is true that Washington lives on political calculations that are largely short-term in nature, but equally right are those who measure China's modernization by its willingness to commit to the global norms required by its membership in such organizations as the World Trade Organization (WTO) and are not satisfied with the country's progress.

Given that it very much appears that China is enjoying its increasing leverage over the US economy, it is becoming additionally unlikely that the United States' ability to pressure China and get whatever it wants will continue. Recent headlines from the state-controlled Shanghai Daily - "China-US talks hailed as 'complete success'" - are broadly interpreted in Washington as indicative both of China's broad disconnect from reality and its leadership's insensitivity to the issues being raised. Long gone is any semblance of Chinese kowtowing to Western superiority.

Both the most recent SED and Paulson's comments last Tuesday seem to reflect an implicit awareness that China may be gaining the upper hand, and that it is now Washington that fears upsetting Beijing. Forced to provide some meaningful outcome of the SED, Paulson on Tuesday pointed out that "we announced a new air-services agreement that will make it easier, cheaper, and more convenient to fly people and to ship goods between the US and China". For Congress members under pressure to abate China's mercantilist policies and its currency manipulation in the hopes of protecting US manufacturing jobs, adding new air routes between the countries rings very hollow.

For those who have watched US-China relations develop over the past 20 years, it is common to read nothing surprisingly new into these exchanges. The same issues raise their head from time to time, and appear to be externally dealt with by incremental changes from China, which cumulatively results in only the most gradual and minimal of more substantive change. But when both Democrat and Republican parties agree that China must make changes to its trade policies and WTO compliance or else suffer the repercussions, Washington is signaling to Beijing that hyperbole is giving way to legislative action.

Add to this the ongoing frustration in Washington regarding the inability of either party to add clarity to how the US should extricate itself from Iraq, and the political reality is that both parties want to appear as if they are empowered, active and insightful on matters relevant to their constituents, with China providing an ideal outlet for their need to act.

Republican Congressman Don Manzullo, historically a strong advocate of free trade, summed up the current climate in Washington about China's trade policies when during the meeting late last month of the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission he testified that, regarding China's trade policies, "this Congress is really, really upset" and warned that legislation such as the Hunter-Ryan Bill (also known as the Fair Currency Act of 2007) "has legs to it".

Similarly, Senators Chris Dodd (a Democrat) and Richard Shelby (a Republican) in a letter to Paulson on May 20 wrote: "Should you find that Treasury's existing authority is insufficient to eliminate these unfair trade practices, we expect that you will communicate to the Senate Banking Committee any legislative options that may be necessary for improving our nation's ability to ensure a level playing field for US firms and workers."

Not to be outdone, in mid-May the House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee released a bipartisan letter to Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi stating: "More generally, the committee is increasingly concerned about trade-distorting subsidies in China. When it acceded to the WTO, China agreed to immediately eliminate its export-subsidy programs. Unfortunately, China has failed to do so. A number of subsidies

Continued 1 2 


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