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諾獎得主批川普貿易戰 Trump's Trade Confusion

(2018-04-20 11:10:15) 下一個

美諾貝爾經濟學獎得主:美國應尊重中國發展的權利

中央廣播電視總台國際在線 2018年04月20日 11:53

  4月12日,諾貝爾經濟學獎獲得者、美國哥倫比亞大學教授約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨在紐約哈佛俱樂部出席“2018高層峰會:新世界格局下的中美商務關係”。(攝影:錢珊銘)

  國際在線報道(中國國際廣播電台記者 錢珊銘):美國諾貝爾經濟學獎得主斯蒂格利茨近日在紐約表示,美國應尊重中國發展的權利,不應通過貿易保護主義措施來試圖削減美對華貿易逆差。

  諾貝爾經濟學獎獲得者、美國哥倫比亞大學教授約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨近日在紐約舉行的中美商務關係高層峰會上指出,中國仍是一個發展中國家,正在致力於自身建設的方方麵麵,美國應尊重中國發展的權利。他說:“美國應該尊重中國發展的權利。中國提出的‘中國製造2025’戰略也是基於其發展中國家的基本國情。中國雖然是個巨大的發展中國家,但他們的人均收入隻有美國人的五分之一。所以,他們需要發展。事實上,很多發展中國家都希望能大力發展經濟,提高人均收入水準。目前,中國正在致力於推動消費繼續成為其經濟增長的驅動力、處理環境問題、進行稅製改革等。”

  斯蒂格利茨指出,美國不應將自己的法律標準強加於中國,更何況美國的這些標準本身就存在缺陷。

  針對特朗普指責中國“強迫美國企業轉讓技術”,斯蒂格利茨指出,美國企業通過合資的方式進入中國之前,就已經了解了中方對外國直接投資提出的要求,即外國企業在合資過程中需要進行一定程度的技術轉讓。這樣的規定並不是專門針對美國企業的。如果不讚同這一交易準則,美國企業可以選擇不進入中國市場。然而事實是,許多美國企業都很貪心,一方麵想要在中國巨大的市場中分一杯羹,另一方麵又反悔不願意轉讓技術,轉而用美國的標準去指責中國。

  斯蒂格利茨說,中國已承諾進一步擴大開放,正在不斷放寬外資準入標準,取消原有的許多限製。與此同時,中方也希望這是一個互利互惠的過程,然而美國經常以“國家安全”為由對中國提出的各項需求加以拒絕。斯蒂格利茨說:“中國表示將進一步擴大開放,也歡迎更多的外國投資。當然,他們也希望這是一個互利互惠的過程。例如,中方希望能將他們的一些科技產品銷往美國市場,也希望購入一些美國的科技產品。中方也願意擴大赴美投資。然而,美國經常以‘國家安全’為由拒絕這些投資。”

  斯蒂格利茨指出,特朗普政府采取的貿易保護主義措施,無益於美國經濟的發展,最終將為美國各行業發展、就業、消費等帶來一係列負麵影響。

  他說,美中雙方暫未達成雙邊投資協定,而世貿組織成員也沒達成多邊投資協定。因此,如果美中雙方在投資領域發生分歧,應通過雙邊談判著力解決。而一旦在貿易方麵發生爭端,則應訴諸於世貿組織,基於相關法律法規進行磋商解決,而不是像美國這樣通過單邊施加壓力、推高貿易壁壘、挑起貿易爭端來達成自己的目的。斯蒂格利茨說:“世貿組織具備爭端解決機製。如果美方認為中方違反了世貿組織的行為準則,可以向世貿組織提出訴訟要求。但特朗普政府並沒有在WTO框架下采取任何行動,這使得我們都在猜測,所謂的中國違反貿易準則到底是真的還是假的?反倒是中國已經將美國301征稅建議及進口鋼鐵、鋁產品232措施訴諸世貿組織,而美國很有可能在此過程中違反了世貿組織的相關規定。”

  斯蒂格利茨強調,無論是對待貿易還是投資,美國政府都應采取理性的方式,通過對話磋商與中方在貿易規則、技術轉讓、知識產權保護等問題上尋求達成共識。

Trump's Trade Confusion
Apr 5, 2018 JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ

Writing for PS since 2001 
243 Commentaries

Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is University Professor at Columbia University and Chief Economist at the Roosevelt Institute. His most recent book is Globalization and Its Discontents Revisited: Anti-Globalization in the Era of Trump.

US President Donald Trump's recently announced import tariffs on steel, aluminum, and $60 billion in other goods that the US imports from China each year are in keeping with his record of responding to nonexistent problems. Unfortunately, while Trump captures the world's attention, serious real problems go unaddressed.

NEW YORK – The trade skirmish between the United States and China on steel, aluminum, and other goods is a product of US President Donald Trump’s scorn for multilateral trade arrangements and the World Trade Organization, an institution that was created to adjudicate trade disputes.

Before announcing import tariffs on more than 1,300 types of Chinese-made goods worth around $60 billion per year, in early March Trump sweeping tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum, which he justified on the basis of national security. Trump insists that a tariff on a small fraction of imported steel – the price of which is set globally – will suffice to address a genuine strategic threat.

Most experts, however, find that rationale dubious. Trump himself has already undercut his national-security claim by exempting most major exporters of steel to the US. Canada, for example, is exempted on the condition of a successful renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement, effectively threatening the country unless it gives into US demands.

But there are a host of issues in contention, involving, for example, lumber, milk, and cars. Is Trump really suggesting that the US would sacrifice national security for a better agreement on these minor irritants in US-Canadian trade? Or perhaps the national-security claim is fundamentally bogus, as Trump’s secretary of defense has suggested, and Trump, as muddled as he is on most issues, realizes this.

As is often the case, Trump seems to be fixated on a bygone problem. Recall that, by the time Trump began talking about his border wall, immigration from Mexico had already dwindled to near zero. And by the time he started complaining about China depressing its currency’s exchange rate, the Chinese government was in fact propping up the renminbi.

Likewise, Trump is introducing his steel tariffs after the price of steel has already increased by about 130% from its trough, owing partly to China’s own efforts to reduce its excess capacity. But Trump is not just addressing a non-issue. He is also inflaming passions and taxing US relationships with key allies. Worst of all, his actions are motivated by pure politics. He is eager to seem strong and confrontational in the eyes of his electoral base.

Even if Trump had no economists advising him, he would have to realize that what matters is the multilateral trade deficit, not bilateral trade deficits with any one country. Reducing imports from China will not create jobs in the US. Rather, it will for ordinary Americans and create jobs in Bangladesh, Vietnam, or any other country that steps in to replace the imports that previously came from China. In the few instances where manufacturing does return to the US, it will probably not create jobs in the old Rust Belt. Instead, the goods are likely to be produced by robots, which are as likely to be located in high-tech centers as elsewhere.

Trump wants China to reduce its bilateral trade surplus with the US by $100 billion, which it could do by buying $100 billion worth of US oil or gas. But whether China were to reduce its purchases from elsewhere or simply sell the US oil or gas on to other places, there would be little if any effect on the US or global economy. Trump’s focus on the bilateral trade deficit is, frankly, silly.

Predictably, China has answered Trump’s tariffs by threatening to respond to their imposition with tariffs of its own. Those tariffs would affect US-made goods across a wide range of sectors, but disproportionately in areas where support for Trump has been strong.

China’s response has been firm and measured, aimed at avoiding both escalation and appeasement, which, when dealing with an unhinged bully, only encourages more aggression. One hopes that US courts or congressional Republicans will rein in Trump. But, then again, the Republican Party, standing in solidarity with Trump, seems suddenly to have forgotten its longstanding commitment to free trade, much like a few months ago, when it forgot its longstanding commitment to fiscal prudence.

More broadly, support for China within both the US and the European Union has been waning for a number of reasons. Looking beyond the US and European voters who are suffering from deindustrialization, the fact is that China is not the gold mine it was once perceived to be for American corporations.

As Chinese firms have become more competitive, wages and environmental standards in China have risen. Meanwhile, China has been slow to open up its financial markets, much to the displeasure of Wall Street investors. Ironically, while Trump claims to be looking out for US industrial workers, the real winner from “successful” negotiations – which would spur China to open its markets further to insurance and other financial activities – is likely to be Wall Street.

Today’s trade conflict reveals the extent to which America has lost its dominant global position. When a poor, developing China started increasing its trade with the West a quarter-century ago, few imagined that it would now be the world’s industrial giant. China has already surpassed the US in manufacturing output, savings, trade, and even GDP when measured in terms of purchasing power parity.

Even more frightening to many in the advanced countries is the real possibility that, beyond catching up rapidly in its technological competence, China could actually lead in one of the key industries of the future: . AI is based on big data, and the availability of data is fundamentally a political matter that implicates issues such as privacy, transparency, security, and the rules that frame economic competition.

The EU, for its part, seems highly concerned with protecting data privacy, whereas China does not. Unfortunately, that could give China a large advantage in developing AI. And advantages in AI will extend well beyond the technology sector, potentially to almost every sector of the economy. Clearly, there needs to be a global agreement to set standards for developing and deploying AI and related technologies. Europeans should not have to compromise their genuinely held concerns about privacy just to promote trade, which is simply a means (sometimes) to achieving higher living standards.

In the years ahead, we are going to have to figure out how to create a “fair” global trading regime among countries with fundamentally different economic systems, histories, cultures, and societal preferences. The danger of the Trump era is that while the world watches the US president’s Twitter feed and tries not to be pushed off one cliff or another, such real and difficult challenges are going unaddressed.

23 Comments on this article

  •  

    But Stiglitz, as chairman of the U.N. Commission on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System, said nothing about the risk weighted capital requirements for banks, which act like tariffs and odiously distort the allocation of credit to the real economy 
    https://teawithft.blogspot.com/2018/03/the-basel-committees-tariffs-of-35-risk.html

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  •  

    Just looking at the issue from the financial side (instead of the product side): the trade balance is (typically the largest) part of the current account balance which is trade plus services. And the current account reflects the cross-border transfer of wealth. A current account deficit represents the amount of domestic assets which have moved into foreign ownership. Since the Vietnam War, the US has transferred domestic assets into foreign ownership (i. e. return on those assets goes abroad). I am surprised that apparently no one in the American intelligentsia is worried about this. The US used to be the world's largest creditor and has now become the world's largest debtor? Is that really irrelevant???

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  •  

    "Reducing imports from China will not create jobs in the US. Rather, it will increase prices for ordinary Americans and create jobs in Bangladesh, Vietnam, or any other country that steps in to replace the imports that previously came from China."

    Really? This is the best argument that mainstream economists can muster in favor of "free"-trade? No wonder nobody takes them seriously, other than those who benefited from the current regime.

    So, once there's balanced trade with all involved, what's going to happen? Ah, yes, jobs in the US, cause fiscal policy will work without fear of import leaks, or imports distorting the US economy in favor of bubble sectors (FIRE sector).

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  •  

    Well said ANTON LJUTIC. !

    I don't know if Mr Stiglitz is entirely correct in his assessment, but at least he's making intelligent noises. And as you say there's not much sign of intelligent response.

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  •  

    ".... Or perhaps the national-security claim is fundamentally bogus,...."

    Not much 'perhaps' about it. Most of the US' constant bleating about 'national security' is bogus.

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  •  

    Ash Carter, in an interview to 'Politico' in February had said that economists had not provided real answers for dealing with China. William Galston, he served in Clinton's first term in office, says that China is yet to ratify the Government Procurement Agreement that it agreed to do so when it joined WTO in 2001. it is about non-discriminatory opportunity in government procurement. 

    Joseph Stiglitz, who discovered a niche for himself, opposing free trade and all the other nice things for the Fund and for Wall Street, suddenly discovers virtue in free trade because Trump is now considering imposing tariffs on China.

    One thing is clear: whether or not Trump wins, economists have both lost it are still losing it.

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    •  

      "Joseph Stiglitz, who discovered a niche for himself, opposing free trade and all the other nice things for the Fund and for Wall Street, suddenly discovers virtue in free trade because Trump is now considering imposing tariffs on China."

      That's quite unfair based on the content of the above article. Stiglitz is simply pointing out the extent to which 'Free marketeers' have changed their position because somebody is beating them at their own game. Not that US republicans are much concerned with the productive economy when there is much more to be made from the financial markets.

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  •  

    Please, just this once, apply your energy and knowledge to the problem of reducing the trade deficit with China, rather than arguing it doesn't matter, or will resolve itself, or is a really good thing, or there is some other bigger problem. Just accept it as a problem and provide a solution -- like a bright ambitious student.

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    •  

      Yes, Robert, but have you considered that the trade deficit with China just might not be a problem ?

      If it ain't (actually) broke it don't (actually) need fixed.

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  •  

    The border wall is to stop ILLEGAL immigration.

    •  

      "The border wall is to stop ILLEGAL immigration."

      Fat chance that will work. Like the illegals are going to bump into it and decide to go home.

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  •  

    There isn't a single reply yet that coherently addresses Stiglitz's argument. It's all just contrarian noise. Especially intriguing is George's statement that China is just looking after it's own interests. I guess Trump isn't? And "Make America first" is not a tribal call to close ranks? 

    Let America begin saving more and spending less and we will see the deficit problem disappear overnight and America run a surplus on trade. But so long as America keeps consuming goods and services that they aren't producing, the difference will have to be made up by their neighbours. Balance of trade is an accounting IDENTITY and it can't be changed by clever arguments. Imports have to be earned with exports or else put on a bill and added to the debt (check the US Capital Account of the BoP!). And what a lot of people seem to miss is that we do not borrow their MONEY. Their money is just a vehicle, a unit of account It cannot be used to buy anything in America. What we do borrow is their goods and services. To be repaid in the same manner, sometime in the future. And it won't be easy to go from full tilt borrowing to repaying.

    Problem is, it is awfully expensive to ring the world with military bases, prosecute wars, foment or suppress insurrections (depending on their flavour) and forego billions in tax cuts and loopholes for the wealthy individuals and corporations without tightening the proverbial belt - always politically unpopular. And if the belt isn't tightened then there will be more borrowing. And this President seems keen on loosening rather than tightening the belt. 

    A wise man would bet on persistent trade deficits at least during this Presidency. But, perhaps, that is not the problem. Mr. Stiglitz has offered an opinion on what the real problem today is (and what isn't). You may disagree with him, but if you do, please explain why your opinion should be preferable to his. Don't just rant.

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  •  

    However you slice it, it costs more to make things in developed countries than in less developed ones. 

    Much like software updates that are essential to keep our computers operating at peak efficiency, all the US can do to sustain if not increase our exports is to sell something state of the art or something at lower cost than anyone else. 

    The former commands a premium whereas the latter creates or keeps market share. Tariffs to punish our trading partners because they have lower labor costs simply hurts the US consumer; they're a tax by any other name. 

    At best, Trump the Terrible might be able to make some headway removing trading abuses and non tariff barriers in exchange for removing his tariffs. In any case, he better do it soon before his base realize the cost they're paying for his confrontational hubris

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    •  

      I think the best gloss that can be put on Trump's tariffs is that they might be only an attempt at a negotiating strategy. It looks like high risk strategy to me. 

      If he was playing poker I'd be inclined to put a few 'bucks' on his hand being less than impressive.

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  •  

    Firstly 
    How sad that a nobel price economist measuring trade by dollar amount and not what actually being trade.
    Yes it is labor, taxes and profits what is actually being traded.
    Now when you measure the correct economic elements than you can clearly see that that the U.S. has a 30 million labor deficit with China alone and about 500 billion in taxes if those labor would be employed in the U.S. 
    please do not give me the nonsense that the U.S. has full employment with 80 million people out of the workforce labor participation is barely above 60 percent.
    Are all these 80 million people all millioners.
    Secondly 
    Tariffs never worked to uphold the economic democracy the very basics of economic rights of individuals to be able to sell their labor for a fair market value in their respective economic jurisdiction without any interference by governments policies especially trade arrangements that directly discriminate against them. 
    Only good old quotas did the work to uphold the economic democracy but laughably it’s against the WTO rules. 
    And who is that signed against economic democracy?

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  •  

    Free trade? Hey, how about free trade in IDEAS... Can the $250/hour Stiglitz Economic Call Center name a single Economics idea that couldn't be imported from a Bangalore
    Economic Call Center for $5/hour... And if this were to happen - how would $250/hour Stiglitz Call Center feed itself and pay the rent?

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  •  

    I have read joe’s new book. It’s all about defending the rabid fanatical religious ideology of free trade and globalization, not outlining what is right for the western nations.

    What really stinks is that he describes the real pain the failed practice of free trade and globalization is generating, yet the religious ideology must still come first….. 

    What is real scary is that this blind purest thinking still exists, and these wonks are teaching the next generation of economists!!!

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  •  

    Absolutely perfect time to use the 4th technology industrial revolution to drive harmony, balance and most importantly a global overarching arching policy mapping to Smart Cities, urbanisation and UN2030SDG and 2050 Zero Emissions target. 

    This time round there needs to be mapping and accountability across an eco system as in the digital era, and the circular business models, eco systems online and offline are key. 

    The stakeholder should include tech vendors, nations, regulations, trade, intellectual property, fintech, crypto, security blockchain, AI... 
    1:demarcation between tangible assets and fintech in respect of the choice and penetration offline at point of sale. 
    2: Consideration for the consumer in respect of retaining democracy and having a voice and empowerment to protect their online privacy, dignity, data, identity and most importantly how to get support when bullying, financial theft, harassment, trolling as today there is no effective support to help 
    3. Policy between Human and robot employment demarcation, control, and safety

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    •  

      All sizzle and no meat in these words

  •  

    The word “fair” should have been in the first paragraph, not in the last, where Stiglitz writes, “In the years ahead, we are going to have to figure out how to create a “fair” global trading regime among countries with fundamentally different economic systems, histories, cultures, and societal preferences.” What does he think Trump is doing but to start correcting now what America and the world has snoozed on as technologies and governments have changed? This is a perfect time and incentive for economists and others to wake up to what is now made very public: the trade inequities that have smuggled their inevitable way into the world’s political and economic systems. It would be interesting to know what Stiglitz means by his in quotation marks “’fair’”, and who might be able to concoct a living formula for his special four preferences, and whether they are relevant. Trump may have caused "confusion", but let's hope that those confused by his actions are able to discern the unfairness that Trump has pointed out in bold and begin “to figure out” now, not in the future, how to come to his aid and help rebalance the skewed scales of trade.

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    •  

      "Trump may have caused "confusion"...."

      He certainly has. And that in itself is no bad thing, because it must surely persuade economists and political theorists to interrogate their rather tired and threadbare beliefs.

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  •  

    Your last paragraph says it all if you realize that the history and culture of China and others, define as fair, that which benefits their tribe (country) and that it is foolish not to grab what is available while it is available. Adam smith's theories assume a western mindset of individuals competing against other individuals or companies not the ''groups'' prominent in Asian culture.

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    •  

      Interesting point, George.

      The US rapidly heads for collective action in time of war. The selfish interests of the individual, considered de rigeur for peacetime, go straight into the bin for the duration.

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