The Contentious U.S.-china Trade Relationship

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The Contentious U.S.

-China Trade Relationship


Introduction
U.S. trade with China has grown enormously in recent decades and is crucial for both countries. Today,
China is one of the largest export markets for U.S. goods and services, and the United States is among
the top export markets for China. This trade has helped the United States in the form of lower prices
for consumers and higher profits for corporations, but it has also come with costs.
Though U.S. consumers benefited from the flood of cheaper goods from China, millions of
Americans lost their jobs due to import competition. The United States has long accused China of
pressuring American companies to hand over their technology or pilfering it outright. The optimism
that accompanied China’s entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) twenty years ago vanished
as Beijing embraced state-led development, pouring subsidies into targeted industries to the detriment
of U.S. and foreign companies. Meanwhile, investment by Chinese companies has raised national
security concerns. As U.S. President Joe Biden embraces an increasingly aggressive approach, the
future of the economic relationship is uncertain.

What is the history of the U.S.-China trade relationship?


For thirty years following the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, there was
virtually no trade between the two countries; Washington had severed ties with the communist
government in Beijing. In 1979, the United States and China normalized relations, prompting an
explosion of trade over the next four decades from a few billion dollars’ worth to hundreds of billions
of dollars annually.
China also began a decades-long process of economic reform in the late 1970s under the leadership
of Deng Xiaoping. His government loosened state control over the economy and allowed private
industry to develop. Chinese policymakers aimed to boost trade and investment, and in 1986 Beijing
applied to rejoin the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the WTO’s predecessor. After
protracted negotiations with the United States and other WTO members, China joined the WTO in
December 2001. As a condition of admission, Beijing committed to a sweeping set of economic
reforms, including steep tariff cuts for imported goods, protections for intellectual property (IP), and
transparency around its laws and regulations.
At the time, U.S. President Bill Clinton and his advisors contended that bringing China into the global
trading system would not only benefit the United States, but also foster economic and ultimately
democratic reform in China. Still, the move was opposed by U.S. labor unions and many congressional
Democrats, who argued that China’s weak worker and environmental protections would incentivize
similar practices elsewhere and bring about a “race to the bottom.”
Even before China joined the WTO, trade between the two countries was growing. But WTO
membership ensured “permanent normal trade relations,” thereby providing U.S. and foreign
companies additional certainty that they could produce in China and export to the United States. Trade
surged: the value of U.S. goods imports from China rose from about $100 billion in 2001 to more
than $500 billion in 2022. This leap in imports is due in part to China’s critical position in global supply
chains; Chinese factories assemble products for export to the United States using components from
all over the world.

What are the benefits of this trade?


U.S. consumers have benefited from lower prices, and U.S. companies have profited immensely from
access to China’s market. In a 2019 study, economists Xavier Jaravel and Erick Sager found that
increased trade with China boosted the annual purchasing power of the average U.S. household by
$1,500 between 2000 and 2007. China is now the third-largest export market for the United States,
behind Canada and Mexico. A 2022 report by the U.S.-China Business Council, an industry group,
found that exports to China supported more than one million jobs in the United States.
American companies earn hundreds of billions of dollars annually from sales in China—money they
can then invest in their U.S. operations. Chinese companies have invested tens of billions of dollars
in the United States, though this investment has dwindled in recent years amid heightened U.S.
government scrutiny.
For China, the gains from trade with the United States and the rest of the world have been tremendous.
Since 2001, China’s economy has grown more than five-fold, adjusted for inflation, and it is now the
world’s second largest, behind only the United States. (By some measures, it is the largest.) Hundreds
of millions of people have escaped extreme poverty because of this growth.

What Does the U.S. Import from China?


What issues has it created?
Though the trade relationship has undoubtedly brought benefits, it has also presented the United
States and other countries with a host of problems.
Manufacturing job losses. Research led by economists David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon
Hanson found that the costs of boosting trade with China, the so-called China Shock, were more
pronounced than those from increased trade with other countries, such as Japan. This was due to the
speed at which imports rose, the vast size of China’s low-wage workforce, and the range of affected
industries. Their research shows that political polarization also increased in the areas of the country
most harmed by competition with China, which some analysts say helped to spur the rise of Donald
Trump and populist political forces. CFR senior fellow Edward Alden and other experts say the
United States lacks effective policies for managing these economic disruptions.
National security. U.S. policymakers are increasingly worried about Chinese efforts to acquire sensitive
U.S. technology to achieve Beijing’s industrial policy goals and bolster China’s military. U.S. officials
have repeatedly accused Beijing of stealing IP and requiring American companies to share their
technologies as a condition of doing business in China, known as forced technology transfer. Wary of
espionage, Washington has also raised concerns that U.S. companies that use Chinese technology
could put U.S. national security at risk.
Subsidization and state-owned enterprises. To achieve its economic goals, the Chinese government
has poured subsidies into a range of industries with the aim of creating “national champion”
companies. Some experts argue that these subsidies are wasteful, but they can be disruptive to other
countries whose companies cannot compete against such levels of state support. The United States
argues that many Chinese state-owned enterprises are effectively arms of the government and, unlike
their private competitors, do not make decisions based on market forces.
Currency manipulation. Many economists say China kept the value of its currency, the renminbi,
artificially low in the decade after it joined the WTO by accumulating U.S. dollar reserves. A weaker
currency makes Chinese imports cheaper and U.S. exports more expensive, thereby contributing to
the United States’ trade deficit with China.
Labor and human rights violations. The United States has long been critical of China on human rights
issues, and U.S. labor groups have persistently complained about poor working conditions in China.
These concerns have resurfaced on the trade agenda in recent years with reports of forced labor in
Xinjiang, where China is repressing millions of Uyghurs.
At the heart of the trade conflict are the two countries’ competing economic systems. As journalist
Paul Blustein details in his book Schism: China, America, and the Fracturing of the Global Trading
System, Chinese officials enthusiastically implemented Beijing’s WTO commitments at first,
engineering a profound transformation of the economy and legal system. But even as China liberalized
its economy in some ways—giving rise to a thriving private sector—it never fully embraced the
invisible hand of the market. The state, dominated by the Chinese Communist Party, oversees the
economy through centralized management of state-owned enterprises, control over financial
institutions, and a powerful economic planning commission. China’s leaders say their system is
necessary to improve the lives of the Chinese people and is in line with the economic strategies used
by Western countries at similar stages of development.
CFR’s Jennifer Hillman says China has perfected the model of obtaining Western technology; it uses
it to develop domestic companies into giants, and then unleashes them into the world market—at
which point foreign companies can no longer compete. Hillman cites 5G networks as an example of
an industry in which China dominates. “You start to see how big a problem it is to try to live in this
world in which China owns more and more markets and you can’t get in,” she says. The United States
has been the most vocal critic of Chinese trade practices, but other countries including European
Union (EU) members and Japan share these concerns.

How has the United States responded?


The United States has attempted to address its trade concerns with China through a mixture of
negotiation, disputes at the WTO, heightened investment scrutiny, tariffs, and its own industrial policy.
The relationship has grown more combative over the past decade as U.S. policymakers have charted
a progressively more assertive course.
As part of China’s entry into the WTO, U.S. negotiators demanded a temporary safeguard that could
be used to limit imports from China, but this was hardly used before it expired twelve years later.
Blustein writes that the George W. Bush administration was worried about cascading calls from U.S.
companies for better protection and needed Beijing’s support for other foreign policy objectives,
including the global war on terrorism. The Bush administration imposed some tariffs on a range of
Chinese goods that were subsidized or “dumped” (i.e., sold at an abnormally low price). It also
launched high-level dialogues with China to address trade issues.
These dialogues continued under President Barack Obama, whose administration cracked down on
Beijing. Obama used the special safeguard to impose tariffs on imported tires, and his administration
won several WTO disputes against China. Scrutiny of Chinese investment also increased, with Obama
taking the rare step of blocking two Chinese acquisitions on the recommendation of the Committee
on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), an interagency body those screens investments
on national security grounds. His administration also concluded negotiations for the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP), a mega-regional trade agreement that it billed as a way to confront China on trade.
President Donald Trump took an even more assertive approach, withdrawing from the TPP and
imposing tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese goods. The two countries
eventually negotiated what they called a “Phase One” agreement, which many experts have criticized
as punting on core U.S. concerns in exchange for a commitment by China to purchase an additional
$200 billion worth of U.S. goods—which it failed to live up to. Trump also designated China as a
currency manipulator for the first time in decades and maintained the Obama administration’s block
on new appointments to the WTO’s Appellate Body, incapacitating the organization’s dispute
settlement system. Meanwhile, the U.S. Congress—responding mainly to fears over Chinese
acquisition of U.S. technology—passed legislation expanding the role of CFIUS and tightening
controls over high-tech exports.
Under President Biden, Washington has taken the most serious steps yet toward weakening China’s
play for economic dominance. He has retained some $360 billion worth of tariffs as well as many
sanctions applied by Trump on Chinese individuals associated with human rights abuses in Xinjiang
and Hong Kong, introduced unprecedented export controls that restrict Beijing’s ability to obtain
advanced technology, and banned some U.S. investment in sensitive technologies that lawmakers fear
could be used to aid China’s growing military. Meanwhile, several U.S. governors have signed laws
preventing state pensions from investing in equities controlled by the Chinese state.

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