Should we be scared of China's surpluses?
10 hours ago
- #Trade Imbalances
- #China Shock
- #Economic Policy
- Historical parallels are drawn between early 20th-century fears of Asian immigration ('Yellow Peril') and current concerns about China's trade surpluses, dubbed 'China Shock 2.0', involving high-value exports like cheap cars.
- Influential voices, including FT, WSJ, and economists like Noah Smith and Paul Krugman, warn that China's large surpluses threaten global trade, deindustrialization, and security, prompting calls for policy intervention.
- Academic studies on 'China Shock 1.0' (low-value exports in early 2000s) show net benefits for the US, with consumer gains from cheaper goods outweighing job losses in manufacturing, suggesting surpluses aren't inherently harmful.
- Five arguments against China's surpluses are analyzed: beggar-thy-neighbor effects, security risks, inter-generational trade-offs, financial risks, and growth risks, with limited evidence that surpluses cause net negative impacts.
- Security concerns focus on supply chain dependencies, but decoupling for national security would minimally reduce China's overall surplus, indicating surpluses themselves aren't a primary threat.
- Inter-generational and financial risks are deemed manageable, as demographic trends may sustain imbalances for decades without immediate crises, and past predictions of sharp corrections haven't materialized.
- Growth risks involve dynamic losses from shrinking tradable sectors in deficit countries, but empirical evidence shows static gains often outweigh dynamic losses, and openness to trade generally spurs innovation.
- The conclusion advocates for nuanced policy responses to 'China Shock 2.0' without fearing surpluses per se, emphasizing the benefits of cheap goods and the need for strategic industrial competitiveness.