It wasn't set up as a retaliation. But Barnaby Joyce and the Chinese
government have produced a powerful retort to Indonesia's big move against
Australia's cattle trade last week.
After years
of talks, Australia and China have now signed an agreement to sell live
beef cattle to China for the first time.
In the long
run, the China deal has the potential to eclipse Indonesia and every other
export market. In case the Indonesians don't get the message implicitly, the
Agriculture Minister spells it out: "It sends a very strong signal to the
market – be careful when you say you don't want something," he tells me.
"This
gives us the capacity to have another person on the rail buying cattle, and
it's a biggie."
The China
arrangement starts with a relatively modest 40,000 to 50,000 head of cattle a
year but potentially builds to one million.
This is so
big a number that, Joyce adds, it's beyond Australia's current capacity
to supply.
The entire
Australian export head count last year was 1.29 million worldwide, a trade
worth $1.3 billion, averaging almost exactly $1000 per beast. Indonesia
accounted for 56 per cent of all those exports. Last week's big news was that
the Indonesians had abruptly decided to cut their quota by 80 per cent
compared with the corresponding quarter last year.
"It
wasn't specifically an anti-Australian decision," but rather an example of
Indonesia's growing economic nationalism, says Hal Hill, an ANU expert on the
Indonesian economy. "But Australia is an easy target,"
politically he adds. "If there is a measure on the table that has an
anti-Australian implication, there'll be no resistance there.
"If it
were an anti-ASEAN implication," referring to the 10-country
Association of South East Asian Nations, "it'd be a different
story".
An
authority on the Asia-Pacific beef trade, Professor Kym Anderson of Adelaide
University, concurs: "Julie Bishop implied that this decision didn't have
any anti-Australian implication, but it's hard to imagine it didn't – it was
such an unusually large decision. There is some payback."
This episode
carries three important lessons. First, it illustrates that while the
global market for hard commodities is collapsing, demand for food is rising
long-term. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation forecasts that global
food demand will rise 70 per cent over the next 35 years.
"The
protein market is very substantially up," says Barnaby Joyce, whether it's
in the form of beans or beef or other meats. "It won't completely offset
the downturn in coal and iron ore, but it'll certainly be helping."
Anthony
Pratt, chair of packaging firm Visy, made the observation that "on the
current trajectory, food exports of $36 billion are converging on iron ore
exports at $52b," as one rises and the other falls.
He pointed
out that the food and beverage industry provided more than half a million jobs
while iron ore doesn't employ enough people to fill the MCG at only 30,000.
In the past
three years food exports have grown 26 per cent. And processed food exports,
with a bigger value-added component, are up 33 per cent.
Another key
difference is that while every mining boom must bust, the long-run demand for
protein is expected to be strong as a rising middle-class in China and India
demands more. This is a structural change, not a short-run boom.
Second,
Australia has botched badly its relations with Indonesia.
Previous
president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono put priority on Australia for almost the
full length of his 10 years in power. When an international gathering or
negotiation approached, SBY customarily sent a hand-written note to the
Australian ambassador: "What does Australia want?" was his standard
question.
Today,
Indonesia's government is more inclined to harm than to help. Canberra needs to
do two things. First, guard against further Indonesian acts of
unfriendliness.
Hal Hill
says: "This Indonesian cabinet doesn't have any clear-headed economic
rationalist" who will defend free trade, "other than the Finance
Minister and he's got his hands full trying to hold the budget together".
He says the
Trade Minister and Agriculture Minister are in a contest to see who can
be more economically chauvinist, and that will mean more protectionism.
"Australia has to work harder to have its voice heard to prevent or to
overturn decisions that harm our exports."
Canberra
also needs to seek opportunities patiently to rebuild relations where it can.
The third
lesson is the value of diversification. In trade, as in investment,
diversification is a risk management tool. Joyce has done much to
diversify live cattle exports. He's negotiated access to seven new countries,
including China.
The Trade
Minister, Andrew Robb, has negotiated new market-opening deals with all three
of Australia's biggest export markets, China, Japan and South Korea. Next is
India. And he's taking Australia into the US-led, 12-nation Trans Pacific
Partnership.
These are
all big, important pathways to keeping Australia's living standards high amidst
a colossal mining crunch.
The Labor
party is about to come under heavy pressure from the union movement this week
at its national conference to oppose the China deal and the TPP.
While Labor
is right to question some aspects of these deals, it must do it without killing
them altogether. That would be the height of irresponsibility, a betrayal of
the national interest to pander to the protectionist self-interest of a lobby
group.
Trade is the
way nations earn. Bill Shorten is soon to be put to the test.
Peter Hartcher is the international editor Sydney
Morning Herald
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