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對中國的依賴脫鉤一直難以說服美國商界領袖

(2023-06-07 04:33:03) 下一個
對中國的依賴脫鉤一直難以說服美國商界領袖
 
2023 年 6 月 1 日早報
 
美中關係繼續惡化。 NPR 的 A Martinez 采訪了耶魯大學高級研究員斯蒂芬·羅奇 (Stephen Roach),羅奇在他的著作《意外衝突》中概述了與中國關係的路線圖。
 
馬丁內斯,主持人:
 
美國和中國這兩個世界上最大的經濟體之間的關係正處於幾十年來最糟糕的時期,但減少美國對中國的依賴一直是一些美國商界領袖的艱難推銷。 在本周訪問上海期間,億萬富翁特斯拉首席執行官埃隆馬斯克表示,兩國的利益“像連體雙胞胎一樣交織在一起”。 我們現在轉向耶魯大學的斯蒂芬·羅奇。 他在他的書《意外衝突:美國、中國和虛假敘述的衝突》中勾畫了這種關係的新路線圖。
 
斯蒂芬,我正在看你書的封麵藝術,五對紅藍相間的手臂交織在一起。 這讓我想起了馬斯克的名言,“像連體雙胞胎一樣交織在一起。” 您認為美國有什麽辦法可以在經濟上擺脫對中國的依賴?
 
史蒂芬·羅奇:不,我沒有。 如果沒有貿易戰、科技戰和現在可能變得更熱的冷戰,我認為這裏真正缺少的是一種參與架構,我們如何與中國人交談,我們如何處理貿易、經濟、創新等問題, 人權、氣候、網絡、全球健康。 我們沒有現有的參與框架。 我們需要一個新的,我剛剛在周末寫了一篇關於它的文章。
 
馬丁內斯:斯蒂芬,如果自力更生是一種幻想,那麽減少對中國的依賴怎麽樣?
 
ROACH:好吧,我們想在這裏表現得很可愛。 我們已經為純自力更生或脫鉤的含義提供了一個新詞。 我們稱之為去風險化。 但這就像你之前的主持人剛才說的,他們把 UFOs 改名為 UAPs。 這是同一個概念。 當您將過去從中國獲得的組件從越南獲得時,這就使供應鏈聯係脫鉤了。 不要自欺欺人,並試圖稱之為去風險。
 
馬丁內斯:這是否可以追溯到理查德尼克鬆 1972 年訪華? 我的意思是,它解凍了關係。 它向美國開放了中國貿易,但這就是一切的開端嗎?
 
羅奇:好吧,尼克鬆和基辛格 1972 年的那次訪問是建立現代關係的開端。 但從那以後,這種關係一直是在領導人之間非常私人化的基礎上進行管理的。 我認為,這反映了個性、自我和國內政治之間微妙的相互作用。 我們需要更深入、更製度化的關係,而我的提議試圖實現這一目標。
 
馬丁內斯:中國在經濟上對美國的依賴程度如何,因為它似乎與美國對中國的依賴程度不相上下?
 
ROACH:這是雙向依賴或相互依賴。 中國依賴於我們龐大而深入的消費需求市場。 他們是出口導向型經濟,他們需要這樣。 但我們依靠他們提供廉價商品來維持消費者的生計。 他們是我們國庫券的大買家,而且是美國第三大、增長最快的出口市場。 所以我們都需要彼此。
 
馬丁內斯:所以考慮到我們都需要彼此,正如你所說,斯蒂芬,這是否可以作為一種,比如說,對侵略的威懾?
 
羅奇:嗯,曆史上有過。 長期以來,經貿一直是美中關係的支柱,旨在限製其他領域的對抗。 但現在兩國及其領導人都更加關注安全而不是經濟和貿易,也就是說,你們知道,他們的關係更像是一種令人擔憂的對抗結構。
 
馬丁內斯:你知道,我之前提到過埃隆馬斯克的訪問。 他是一個知名度很高的人,所以這次訪問會引起很多關注。 但是,比如說,當 NBA 這樣的知名品牌——當 NBA 在中國市場投資數十億美元時,這是否讓我們更多地了解美國在反對中國的政策方麵究竟能有多強硬?
 
羅奇:多年來,美國企業真正認識到在中國投資的雙重好處。 他們從離岸外包中獲得了更高效的生產、離岸生產解決方案,同時也獲得了開拓世界上最富有、最深入的市場的機會。 但隨著我們專注於安全性,這些優勢現在正在消失。

Decoupling reliance on China has been a difficult to sell to U.S. business leaders

https://www.npr.org/2023/06/01/1179378177/decoupling-reliance-on-china-has-been-a-difficult-to-sell-to-u-s-business-leader

Heard on Morning Edition  

U.S.-China relations continue to sour. NPR's A Martinez talks to Yale University senior fellow Stephen Roach, who outlines a roadmap for relations with China in his book: Accidental Conflict.

A MARTÍNEZ, HOST:

Relations between the United States and China, the world's biggest economies, are at their worst in decades, but reducing American reliance on China has been a tough sell with some U.S. business leaders. During a visit to Shanghai this week, billionaire Tesla CEO Elon Musk said the interests of the two countries are, quote, "intertwined like conjoined twins." We turn now to Yale University's Stephen Roach. He outlines a new roadmap for this relationship in his book, "Accidental Conflict: America, China, And The Clash Of False Narratives."

Stephen, I was looking at the art of the cover of your book, five pairs of red and blue arms intertwined. It kind of reminded me of Musk's quote, "intertwined like conjoined twins." Do you see any way for the U.S. to break its dependency on China economically?

STEPHEN ROACH: No, I don't. Without a trade war, a tech war and now a cold war possibly getting even hotter, I think that what's really missing here is an architecture for engagement, how we talk to the Chinese, how we deal with issues like trade, economics, innovation, human rights, climate, cyber, global health. We don't have an existing framework of engagement. And we need a new one, and I just wrote an article about that over the weekend.

MARTÍNEZ: If self-reliance then, Stephen, is a fantasy, how about less reliance on China?

ROACH: Well, we're trying to be cute here. We have given a new word to what pure self-reliance or decoupling would mean. We call it de-risking. But that's like your previous presenter just said, they renamed UFOs UAPs. It's the same concept. When you take a component that you used to get from China and you get it from Vietnam, that has decoupled that supply chain linkage. Don't kid yourself and try to call it de-risking.

MARTÍNEZ: Does this go back to Richard Nixon's visit to China in 1972? I mean, it thawed relations. It opened up China to U.S. trade, but is that where all this kind of got its start?

ROACH: Well, that visit in 1972, Nixon and Kissinger, is the sort of the dawn of creation of the modern relationship. But ever since then, the relationship has been managed on a very personal basis between leaders. And that reflects, I think, a delicate interplay between personalities, egos, and domestic politics. We need a deeper, more institutionalized relationship, and my proposal tries to achieve that.

MARTÍNEZ: How much does China rely economically on the U.S. 'cause it seems like it's kind of on par with how much the U.S. relies on China?

ROACH: It's a two-way dependency or a codependency. China relies on us for our large and deep market of consumer demand. They're an export-led economy, and they need that. But we rely on them for the cheap goods they give us to make ends meet for consumers. They're a huge buyer of our treasuries, and they're the third-largest and most rapidly growing U.S. export market. So we both need each other.

MARTÍNEZ: So considering we both need each other, as you say, Stephen, could that serve as a, say, deterrent for aggression either way?

ROACH: Well, it has historically. Economics and trade has long been the anchor of the U.S.-China relationship that has served the purpose of limiting confrontation in other areas. But now both countries and their leaders are more focused on security rather than economic and trade, and that is, you know, more of a worrisome, confrontational structure to their relationship.

MARTÍNEZ: You know, I mentioned Elon Musk's visit earlier. He's a high-profile name, so that visit was going to get a lot of attention. But when, say, high-profile brands such as the NBA - when the NBA invests billions of dollars in the Chinese market, does that give us more of a clue of how tough the U.S. can really get in opposing policies from China?

ROACH: Over the years, U.S. businesses have really recognized the dual benefits of investing in China. They get more efficient production, offshore production solutions from their offshoring, and they also get the opportunity to tap the world's richest and deepest market. But those advantages are now slipping away as we focus on security.

MARTÍNEZ: Stephen Roach is a senior fellow at Yale's Law School's China Center. Stephen, thanks.

ROACH: Thank you.

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