The UK’s approach to Beijing, while hardly surprising, suffers from
several fatal flaws.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping received the reddest of red-carpet treatments in London
last week, with Xi being treated to a 21-gun salute, a royal carriage ride down
the Mall, an address to both Houses of Parliament, followed by a State Banquet
at Buckingham Palace and a visit to the Prime Minister’s official residence
Chequers.
The fact
that British Prime Minister David Cameron used the full powers of the British
state to welcome the Chinese leader has many wondering about the future of
UK-China ties as the two proclaim a new “golden era” of bilateral relations,
and agree to create a “global comprehensive strategic partnership.”
While
many in London question the timing – this year Beijing mismanaged a stock
market slump while simultaneously tightening control over dissidents – the
Treasury attitude is simply to bulldoze the new China approach through other
departments of government, including a skeptical Foreign Office. The visit and
the assumptions it’s based on raise questions about Britain’s tactical
understanding of China. After all, as Evan Medeiros, former senior staffer on
Asia on President Obama’s National Security Staff, told the Financial Times,
“if you give in to Chinese pressure, it will inevitably lead to more Chinese
pressure.”
The
seemingly ‘new’ mercantilist approach of Chancellor George Osborne is deeply
embedded in historical traditions of British foreign policy-making, and has run
parallel and sometimes counter to Britain’s values-oriented foreign policy.
Long before Henry Kissinger said it, Lord Palmerston claimed that Britain had
no “permanent friends or allies, only permanent interests.” Britain has always
viewed trade as one of these permanent interests, since power is derived from
economic standing. This is evident throughout the last century: the UK was the
largest source of long-term foreign direct investment in the United States,
played a pivotal role in Japanese industrialization, and was one of Germany’s
main trade partners prior to both the first and second world wars. If the new
China policy is a mistake, Britain has made it before.
The
Soviet Union was the exception to the rule: blame Russian communist views of
trade. Therefore, it is unremarkable that Osborne wishes to hitch the UK wagon
to China’s rising star. Seen from Whitehall, this approach marries traditional
notions of liberal trade internationalism with the promise of profit for City
of London financiers. The Downing Street website puts this financial promise at
the front of its webpage describing Xi’s visit, claiming it will “unlock” more
than $48 billion of commercial deals across energy, finance, technology, and
education. The question is whether all this promise will be delivered and at
what cost to Britain’s security and freedom of maneuver.
Unlike
Britain, China does not prize the bilateral relationship for short-term
economic gains, but rather seeks to use British financial acumen to lift itself
into ascendancy. The internationalization of the RMB, using London as a trading
hub, and a scheme to link the London and Shanghai stock markets – both
announced during Xi’s visit – are to build the foundation of a new Chinese
order. Xi was not in London just to meet the Queen. He was there to make deals,
buying the experience and know-how of the British financial world and he has
the cash to close the deal. The $48 billion that he’s put on the table could be
just a start: despite the slowing of its economy and huge public debt, China
has more than $1.53 trillion in sovereign wealth funds. Furthermore, London
would profit immensely from becoming the primary RMB trade hub, which is a very
real possibility says Yang Du, head of Thomson Reuters China business desk.
Currently, Britain is the eighth largest destination for Chinese investment:
when Prime Minister Cameron and Chancellor Osborne said at the Buckingham
Palace Banquet that they want Britain to be China’s “best partner in the West,”
this is what they mean.
Caution
is in order, however. The Osborne Doctrine suffers from several fatal flaws.
First, it is hype built on hype. Several economists view Britain’s strategy
toward China as over-relying on foreign investment to sustain growth. Rather
than passing the costs of building British infrastructure – such as three planned
nuclear power plants – on to China, why not borrow at 3 percent and maintain
control over processes, control over quality, and most important, maintain the
capacity of local industry? This off-shoring is rich in irony: Britain – home
to the industrial revolution – is paying China – one of the most recent
adherents of the industrial revolution – to finance and make British products in
Britain. As if to drive home the point, Xi’s visit was preceded by the
bankruptcy of a leading company in the British steel industry, a result of
Chinese steel dumping this year.
The
second flaw is that China does not seem serious about upholding either the
rules-based order that Britain helped build after World War II or the liberal
economic and political values implicit in that order. Prime Minister Cameron’s
silence over human rights issues for the sake of finance was widely criticized
in the British media with Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei claiming that it
was in the name of profit. The Chinese ambassador had even warned that Xi would
be “offended” if human rights were raised during the visit. The main problem
with this approach is that it is simply out of step with the British public,
which expects an ethical foreign policy from Whitehall. Power and finance are
not enough.
This
misplaced faith in Chinese investment promises and the willingness to downplay
human rights issues have not gone down well in Washington, where London’s
embrace of authoritarian China looks increasingly out-of-step with its regional
concerns. This is the third flaw of Osborne’s strategy: Britain is out of touch
with other liberal democracies like Germany and France and how they balance
economic policies with principles. London’s willingness to join the AIIB
without consulting or even alerting the G-7 was a major blow to the group, but
it also damaged British prestige.
Britain
is increasingly out of step with Washington, which sees its trade relationship
with China rapidly eclipsed by issues such as cyber security and maritime
security in the Asia Pacific. Osborne’s willingness to throw open certain
sectors of the economy critical to national security to Chinese investment
strikes many as naïve if not dangerous: a 2013 British Parliamentary committee
issued a scathing report of the government’s willingness to award large
contracts in the telecommunications sector to Huawei, a Chinese company with
purported links to the People’s Liberation Army. Though Cameron did receive a
joint statement from Xi over cyber security during the visit, it is no stronger
than the one Xi gave in Washington, and probably has less meaning.
Finally,
there is the flaw of unintended consequences: Beijing’s belief that Britain – a
major player in the current liberal rules-based order – is bandwagoning for
profit may encourage China to attempt to dismantle the system in favor of one
that favors Beijing’s autocratic preferences. No one believes that Britain
could play a pivotal role if a conflict broke out in the Asia Pacific, but it
may help deter Chinese adventurism. This regional aspect highlights the
shortsightedness of the Osborne Doctrine because it assumes that as long as
China’s misbehavior occurs in the Asia-Pacific region, it does not impinge on
British interests. This belies Britain’s dependence on trade routes that transit
the contested South China Sea and East China Sea waters.
President
Xi’s carriage ride down the Mall to Buckingham Palace was rich in symbolism;
the image of Prime Minister Cameron kowtowing to the Chinese president evokes
Britain’s first diplomatic mission to China in 1793, when Lord Macartney
traveled to meet the Qianlong Emperor in Peking. His attempt to open trade
between the two empires ended in failure as the two held incompatible
worldviews and practiced incompatible diplomatic cultures. Seeing President Xi
and his wife dressed in Western clothes, in front of a trade delegation to
Britain would seem to indicate that two states understand each much better now.
However, Cameron’s willingness to trade British principles for investment and
significant concessions and market access show that London is no closer to
understanding Beijing than it was 250 years ago.
John
Hemmings, an adjunct fellow at Pacific Forum CSIS, is a doctoral candidate at
the London School of Economics. This was originally published as a PacNet commentary here and is
republished with kind permission.
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