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Friday, 15 December 2006 By Walden Bello*
(This essay was prepared for the Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainable Development.) The much publicized wooing of African countries by China exemplified by the China-Africa meeting that took place in Beijing in the first week of November brings up the question of how China is faring in its economic relations with its closest neighbors?
Southeast Asia, which is formally grouped into the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), is probably the region most courted by China, so its relations with the area would give some indication of the likely evolution of Beijing's economic diplomacy toward other parts of the global South. At first glance, it seems like the China-ASEAN relationship has been positive. After all, demand from a Chinese economy growing at a breakneck pace was a key factor in Southeast Asian growth beginning around 2003, after a period of low growth dependent on domestic demand. Indeed, this was also the case for Korea and Japan. For Asia as a whole, in 2003 and the beginning of 2004, noted an UNCTAD report, "China was a major engine of growth for most of the economies in the region. The country's imports accelerated even more than its exports, with a large proportion of them coming from the rest of Asia."
A More Complex Picture
Yet the picture was more complex than that of a Chinese locomotive
pulling the rest of East Asia along with it on a fast track to economic
nirvana. There have been widespread fears that China's growth is, in
fact taking place at Southeast Asia's expense. Low wages, many in
Southeast Asia feared, has encouraged local and foreign manufacturers
to phase out their operations in relatively high wage Southeast Asia
and moving them to China. There appears to be some support for this.
China's devaluation of the yuan in 1994 had the effect of diverting
some foreign direct investment away from Southeast Asia. The trend of
ASEAN losing ground to China accelerated after the financial crisis of
1997. In 2000, foreign direct investment in ASEAN shrank to 10 per
cent of all foreign direct investment in developing Asia, down from 30
per cent in the mid-nineties. The decline continued in 2001 and 2002,
with the United Nations World Investment Report attributing the trend
partly to "increased competition from China." Since the Japanese have
been the most dynamic foreign investors in the region, much
apprehension in the ASEAN capitals greeted a Japanese government survey
that revealed that 57 per cent of Japanese manufacturing TNCs found
China to be more attractive than the ASEAN-4 (Thailand, Malaysia,
Indonesia, and the Philippines).
Snags in a Trade Relationship
Trade was another, perhaps greater, area of concern. In the last few
years, China has aggressively sought free trade agreements with the
ASEAN governments. This push appears to have met with some success.
Thailand and China concluded an "early harvest" free trade pact in
2003. And at the 10 th ASEAN Summit held in Vientiane, Laos, in
November 2004, the ASEAN countries issued a joint statement expressing
agreement with the goal of removing all tariffs between ASEAN and China
by the year 2010. At that meeting, a positive spin on the proposed
China-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement was provided by Philippine President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who hailed the emergence of a "formidable
regional grouping" that would rival the United States and the European
Union.
Yet, things have not proceeded as smoothly as Beijing would have
wanted. In the experimental arrangement between Thailand and China,
the two countries agreed that tariffs on more than 200 items of
vegetables and fruits would be immediately eliminated. Under the
agreement, Thailand would export tropical fruits to China while winter
fruits from China would be eligible for the zero-tariff deal. The
expectations of mutual benefit evaporated after a few months, however,
with most Thai commentaries admitting that Thailand got a bad deal. As
one assessment put it, "despite the limited scope of the Thailand-China
early harvest agreement, it has had an appreciable impact in the
sectors covered. The "appreciable impact" has been to wipe out northern
Thai producers of garlic and red onions and to cripple the sale of
temperate fruit and vegetables from the Royal projects." Thai
newspapers pointed to officials in Southern China refusing to bring
down tariffs as stipulated in the agreement while the Thai government
brought down the barriers to Chinese products.
Resentment at the results of the China-Thai "early harvest" agreement
among Thai fruit and vegetable growers was, in fact, one of the factors
that contributed to widespread disillusionment with the broader free
trade agenda of the Thaksin government; and opposition to free trade
was a prominent feature of the popular mobilizations that culminated in
the ouster of that regime in mid-September by a military coup.
The Thai early harvest experience, in fact, created consternation not
just in Thailand but throughout Southeast Asia. It stoked fears of
ASEAN becoming a dumping ground for China's extremely competitive
industrial and agricultural sectors, which could drive down prices
owing to cheap urban labor that was continually replenished by dirt
cheap labor streaming from the countryside. People wondered if FTA's
with China would not simply legalize the dumping of Chinese goods, a
great deal of which were already being smuggled across their land
borders with China or, in the case, of the Philippines, across the
South China Sea.
The Chinese View
For Chinese officials, the benefits to China of an FTA with ASEAN were
clear. The aim of the strategy, according to Chinese economist Angang
Hu, was to more fully integrate China into the global economy as the
"center of the world's manufacturing industry." A central part of the
plan was to open up ASEAN markets to Chinese manufactured products. In
light of growing protectionist sentiment in the US and European Union,
Southeast Asia, which absorbed only 8.2 percent of China's exports,was
seen as an important market with tremendous potential to absorb more
Chinese goods. Also key, noted Hu, was the Chinese government's plan to
attract investment "into the western region of China from ASEAN
nations, weaving the western region more thoroughly into the fabric of
regional and international trade."
ASEAN: a Net Beneficiary?
Despite brave words from President Arroyo and other ASEAN leaders, it
was much less clear how ASEAN would benefit from the ASEAN-China
relationship. It was highly doubtful that China would depart from what
Hu has characterized as China's "half open model," which is marked by
"open or free trade on the export side and protectionism on the import
side."
Certainly, the benefits would not come in labor-intensive
manufacturing, where China enjoyed an unbeatable edge by the constant
downward pressure on wages exerted by migrants from a seemingly
inexhaustible rural work force that makes an average of $285 a year.
Certainly not in high tech, since even the US and Japan were scared of
China's remarkable ability to move very quickly into high tech
industries even as it consolidates its edge in labor-intensive
production. Certainly not in labor services, since China could produce
engineers, nurses, and domestic workers that would perform the same
work but at lower wages than their ASEAN counterparts. For instance,
China's recent deployment of seafarers has threatened the Philippines
premier position as a source of seamen globally.
Would agriculture in ASEAN be a net beneficiary? But, as the early
harvest experience with Thailand showed, China was clearly
super-competitive in a vast array of agricultural products from
temperate crops to semi-tropical produce, and in agricultural
processing. Vietnam and Thailand might be able to hold their own in
rice production, Indonesia and Vietnam in coffee, and the Philippines
in coconut and coconut products, but there might not be many more
products to add to the list.
What about raw materials? Yes, of course, Indonesia and Malaysia had
oil that was in scarce supply in China, and Malaysia did have rubber
and tin and the Philippines had palm oil and metals. But a second look
made one wonder if the relationship with China was not reproducing the
old colonial division of labor, whereby low-value-added natural
resources and agricultural products were shipped to the center while
the Southeast Asian economies absorbed high-value added manufactures
from Europe and the United States.
Hard Truths
Thus, drastic imbalance would likely be the result of free trade agreements between the ASEAN countries and China.
In the view of many, the problem lies largely with ASEAN, since despite
the rhetoric of regional integration, ASEAN's economies are still
largely ten separate economies. The vision of creating an integrated
market of 450 million consumers that was expressed by the original
ASEAN plan for regional import substitution industrialization-one that
would have been achieved via increasingly freer trade among member
countries accompanied by high tariffs and quotas against third country
product--was never implemented. The Southeast Asian nations had over
30 years to build an "ASEAN house," and they had squandered the
opportunity. Had ASEAN evolved along the lines envisioned by its
founders, it would not have displayed the disarray with which its
members confronted the rise of China.
Genuine ASEAN integration is long overdue. In undertaking this
process, the ASEAN countries have a lot to learn not only from the
European Union, but from Latin America as well. In contrast to
stagnation in ASEAN, significant movements toward closer regional
cooperation on non-free trade lines are afoot in Latin America. These
include the Peoples' Trade Agreement among Bolivia, Venezuela, and
Cuba, and the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) being
promoted by Venzuelan President Hugo Chavez. In ALBA, 14 Caribbean
countries receive a 40 per cent discount from the world price of oil
from Venezuela, and Bolivia and Argentina have an innovative barter
scheme with Venezuela whereby in return for oil Bolivia exchanges
soybeans and Argentina exchanges heifers. Joint investment schemes in
different capital-intensive projects are in different stages of design
and implementation. (See Davis Harris and Diego Azzi, ALBA:
Venezuela's Answer to Free Trade,
http://www.focusweb.org/pdf/alba-book.pdf.)
To sum up, ASEAN remains a very weak economic entity. Moving quickly
to conclude a free trade agreement with China is likely to lead to the
same consequences as the early harvest agreement China had with
Thailand. Even if China agreed to many ASEAN exemptions from steep
tariff reductions, ASEAN would be locked into a process where the only
direction that barriers to super-competitive Chinese industrial and
agricultural goods would be downwards. At this juncture, an ASEAN-China
FTA or, what is more likely, separate Chinese FTAs with different ASEAN
countries, can only lead to de-industrialization and agricultural
crisis in ASEAN.
The relationship between ASEAN and China is not a colonial
relationship. It cannot even be said to be an exploitative one at this
point. But unless considerations of equity are front and center in the
negotiation of economic relationships between Beijing and its
neighbors, the old structural patterns marking the relations between
Southeast Asia and Europe, the United States, and Japan could easily be
replicated.
*Walden Bello is professor of sociology at the University of the
Philippines and executive director of Focus on the Global South. He is
the author of numerous books and articles on international economic and
political issues. Annette Ferrer provided research assistance.
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