American presidents have
presumed that a “successful” China would be good for the United States. But
this is no longer the case
Today, that
long-standing consensus is breaking down in the face of several dynamic
changes. These include China’s rapid military buildup, its unprecedentedly
quick industrial and economic development, an increasingly assertive Chinese
foreign policy, and new competitive pressures on the United States’ economy and
fiscal health.
Even the most sanguine voices now view the
U.S.-China relationship as competitive, and urge the United States to respond
decisively, if carefully, especially to Beijing’s security behavior in Asia.
Among Washington foreign-policy elites and a growing number of U.S. companies,
China is viewed as a strategic competitor, a military threat in Asia and,
ultimately, a possible adversary. Indeed, during the election campaign, Donald
Trump pledged to adopt a more confrontational approach toward China, not least
by threatening to impose significant tariffs on its exports to the United
States. But Trump is by no means alone in this regard. Across the American
political spectrum, from right to left, a new and more skeptical consensus
about the rise of Chinese power is eroding the aspirational and optimistic view
that prevailed for more than forty years.
It would be difficult to understate just
how important and dramatic this shift could turn out to be. Eight presidents,
from Richard Nixon to Barack Obama, fostered closer relations with China.
Washington opened American markets and welcomed Chinese products into the
United States. It encouraged U.S. firms to invest in China, sharing business
practices and U.S. technologies. Bill Clinton and George W. Bush’s
administrations supported China’s
admission into the World Trade Organization (WTO). Over three decades,
Washington enabled China’s participation in nearly every major international
forum.
In the process, the United States subsumed
many of its concerns about China’s Communist-led political system to its
long-term interest in trying to assure a more integrated, less isolated, less
autarkic China—one that joined and participated in the international system.
But that was not at all: by helping to enable a stronger Chinese economy,
Washington also shelved, at least temporarily, some of its concerns about
China’s capacity to translate butter into guns.
But while the long-standing Washington
consensus about China is breaking down, it would be too simplistic to argue
that the United States is now heading for a more adversarial relationship. The
reality is that the Trump administration’s approach to China will be formulated
against the backdrop of four swiftly changing strategic and economic conditions
in Asia: the growing economic and financial integration of the region, which
has shifted the relative balance of power against the United States; China’s
newly assertive strategic posture; the increasingly diverse economic and social
ties that now characterize American interaction with China and will make
coalition building difficult, whether for more cooperation or more conflict;
and the combination of eroding U.S. military advantage and protectionist trade pressures.
A Trump administration has the opportunity
to adapt to these conditions. If it does, it can define an agenda with China
that sets American policy onto a more strategically and politically sustainable
course.
IT IS already clear that Asia is fast
becoming a more integrated region—more “Asia” than “Asia-Pacific.” This means
that the U.S. role will, in relative terms, become diminished over time.
This trend is structural, and thus not
easily reversible. It reflects the rapid rise of Asian economies, the growth of
intra-Asian trade, the restoration of old linkages between continental and
maritime Asia, and the emergence of Asian market participants, companies and
government financing arms as capital exporters, including to one another, not
just consumers of Western capital. Taken together, this first trend will mean a
smaller role for the United States in relative terms, even though U.S. trade
and direct investment in Asia are rising in absolute terms.
This is a notable change, one that will
make it harder for the new administration to rely on the same playbook the
United States has deployed since World War II. Throughout the postwar period,
but especially since the 1960s, the United States has been the principal
provider of both security and economic related public goods and other benefits
in Asia.
In the security realm, alliances and
partnerships, solidified by the U.S.-Japan security treaty of 1960, a forward-deployed
military presence and willingness to assert American power with carrier battle
groups (and, when necessary, military action) have tamped down major-power war.
There have been localized conflicts, of course, from Indochina to the South China
Sea. But this unique U.S. role has mostly kept the peace.
In the economic realm, the United States
has beaten back protectionist pressure, kept its markets open to Asian exports,
led the region and the world toward liberalization of trade and investment rules,
and enabled Asia’s export-led economies to power their way to prosperity.
The past two administrations, Obama and
Bush, have worked to modernize America’s Asian alliances and security
partnerships. But the changing U.S. economic role, especially when combined
with the death of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and other tools of economic statecraft, such as
American leadership of big regional trade deals and ambitious bilateral
investment treaties, will reinforce the tension in U.S. policy between security
and economics.
The American role as Asia’s security
provider is being reinforced even as the region’s economy becomes increasingly
pan-Asian. So this will deprive the Trump administration of tools that its
predecessors mostly just took for granted. Asian governments will, in many
ways, look to one another for trade, investment and, above all, a hedge against
lingering market volatility from the 2008 financial crisis.
In short, the Trump administration will be
trying to make the U.S. security posture in Asia more sustainable at precisely
the moment when America’s economic profile in the region is beginning to
recede.
A SECOND trend compounds this challenge:
Beijing increasingly seeks to take advantage of these underlying changes in
Asia. In many ways, China has begun to successfully leverage these trends to
bolster its power, profile and interests.
For example, Beijing’s more assertive
posture in the South and East China Seas, together with a raft of new economic
initiatives, are challenging Washington’s footprint in Asia. The latter include
the first true Chinese effort to build new institutions and set technical and
legal standards. One illustration of this is the new multilateral Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), proposed by Beijing in 2013 and launched
with fifty-seven founding members, including some of Washington’s closest
allies. Another is China’s bilateral multitrillion-dollar “Belt and Road”
infrastructure initiative, which aims to finance and build roads, ports, rails
and power plants across Asia and beyond.
Beijing did not invent such pan-Asian
initiatives. Nor did it begin to advocate them only when its self-assured
president, Xi Jinping, rose to power in 2012. In fact, pan-Asianism has a
decades-long pedigree, especially in Japan and Southeast Asia and also among
major development banks. Nor does the construction of infrastructure by China
in itself necessarily or automatically challenge U.S. interests.
But Beijing’s activism, especially against
the backdrop of growing pan-Asian integration, will, in time, reinforce
perceptions of U.S. retreat and Chinese advance. Thus it will challenge the
Trump administration to formulate a strategically coherent and realistic
response—one that gets more American skin into the game.
A THIRD trend that will affect any new
administration approach is the emergence of more stakeholders in the U.S.-China
relationship. This will vastly complicate the politics of building policy
coalitions. Elite consensus around America’s China policy has eroded, yet it
will be no easy thing to build a new one, whether for more confrontation or
even more cooperation with Beijing.
That is because the number of Americans
involved in the relationship with China has become more diverse and
multifaceted than ever. In the 1970s, U.S. ties with Beijing were driven, in
large part, by a desire to triangulate and neutralize the Soviet threat while
also extricating the United States from Vietnam. Thus the core constituency for
the relationship comprised strategic elites and touched geopolitical interests.
From the 1980s, and especially since China’s 2001 entry into the WTO, U.S.
policy has depended not just on foreign-policy elites but also Wall Street and
big U.S. corporations, which have plowed some $65.8 billion in foreign direct
investment stock into China while providing ballast for the relationship during
periods of strategic tension. Today, however, as the economic relationship
grows more diverse and decentralized, American governors and mayors, small- and
medium-sized firms, farmers and ranchers, and technology developers and
entrepreneurs have deep and growing stakes in the U.S.-China relationship.
The more diverse the stakeholders, the
harder it will be for any U.S. administration to assemble a tightly knit
political coalition around this or that overarching strategy. And in fact, this
challenge will be compounded by economic change in China. As Beijing moves to
deploy an even larger share of its $3 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves
(and billions more on corporate balance sheets) into direct investments
overseas, American states, cities and businesses have begun to clamor for a
share. Vice President–elect Mike Pence’s Indiana offers just one example: the
state has both lost jobs to and gained jobs from China. Some factories have
closed and moved operations to China, yet the state has also attracted
job-creating green field investment, such as Nanshan Group’s $160 million
aluminum extrusion operation in West Lafayette, which employs hundreds. China
is one of Indiana’s top overseas markets, with $2.1 billion in exports in 2015.
This complex set of economic interests is
now multiplied in state after state. In turn, even as trade competition with
China mushrooms among the established players, it is creating at least some new
interest groups, warier of economic confrontation between Beijing and
Washington.
Similarly,
as China deploys, on a massive scale, commercial technologies, with which
medium-sized U.S. firms have a competitive advantage, exports to China will be
integral to the growth strategies of midcap firms, not just the large U.S.
multinationals that have dominated U.S.-China economic relations to date.
A FINAL
trend involves growing constraints on U.S. foreign- and economic-policy
activism. Sadly, these may handicap the United States in Asia just as
Washington needs greater leverage to balance the rise of Chinese power.
The
United States needs new military and economic tools to bolster its footprint.
Yet polls consistently show that the public has grown wearier of such
engagement. The 2016 presidential campaign, where both major-party nominees
came out against the TPP, demonstrated that traditional tools, such as
large-scale trade deals, are under intense pressure.
The good
news is that the Trump administration and congressional leaders seem likely to
end the defense-budget sequester and pursue tax, fiscal and competitiveness
reforms that would strengthen the U.S. hand in Asia. Though TPP is now dead,
bilateral trade deals apparently remain on the table.
Still,
the need for major new naval- and force-projection investments, as well as an
overhaul of U.S. economic and competitiveness policies, will be no simple task
for the president and Congress.
In sum,
the United States must make its China policy in the period ahead amid rapidly
changing conditions in Asia and with a more constrained set of tools for
strategic and economic statecraft.
AGAINST
THIS backdrop, the new president and his administration must meet some specific
challenges with China. For one, it has long been presumed that economic
integration between the two countries would mitigate security competition. Yet
to put it bluntly, that does not seem to be happening, and, if anything,
military tensions and competition are actually intensifying. The region’s story
now resembles a “Tale of Two Asias,” with economics and security colliding, not
running in parallel—the U.S.-China relationship is a microcosm of this
debilitating dynamic.
Indeed,
the United States and China have never been so economically integrated. Two-way
trade now exceeds $600 billion. China is America’s fastest-growing export
market; and in agriculture, for instance, exports to China have grown 200
percent over the past decade, reaching $20.2 billion in U.S. farm and food
exports in 2015.
But
despite this deepening integration, security tensions have escalated, with the
risks of military conflict now more real than at perhaps any time since the
1950s.
At the
simplest level, the problem involves choices and policies in the South China
Sea, cyber-related tensions and so on. It also touches China’s deteriorating
relationships with three of America’s five Pacific allies—Japan, South Korea
and Australia. Where Beijing has sought to firewall U.S.-China relations from,
say, China-Japan relations, its pressure on American allies is bleeding into relations
with Washington too.
And yet a
deeper problem exacerbates these day-to-day security tensions: Washington and
Beijing have developed clashing security concepts in Asia. As a result, they
are talking past each other about what has caused tension in the region, finger
pointing at one another, and pursuing contradictory approaches.
This has
reduced the two sides to trying to avoid accidents and minimize escalation
risk, while fatalistically accepting the sharpening of competition. Just take
the South China Sea: Beijing asserts its national maritime rights and
interests, while Washington talks mostly about international norms, rules and
law. The two governments disagree, fundamentally, on how to interpret some
important aspects of international law. And the United States perceives that
China acts as if its interests trump international law. With such
irreconcilable views, the two sides are talking past each other, as the sea
becomes the locus of a full-contact spat between Washington and Beijing.
For Washington,
this will require a series of systematic approaches in the near term: in the
South China Sea, firm adherence to principles of international law; a
willingness to operate its fleet and aircraft where the law permits;
maintenance (or new building) of a naval capacity to so operate; routine but
discreet, as opposed to erratic yet showy, freedom-of-navigation operations,
directed at sending consistent messages to China and its neighbors rather than
public relations; assistance to allies and partners with domain awareness; and
a continuing effort with Beijing to mitigate the risk of accidents.
It will
also require substantial diplomatic effort, for instance, by encouraging the
non-China claimants in Southeast Asia to settle their claims with one another, in
part to strengthen their collective hand with Beijing.
Security
competition with China will be a fact of life for the new president. It cannot
simply be wished away. But Washington also needs to be more vigilant about
distinguishing its vital interests from those that are more peripheral—and this
will be particularly true as it manages diverse security partnerships around
Asia.
Of
course, the economic relationship will not be so easy either, and not just
because President-elect Trump promises a toughened policy. China and the United
States have become centerpieces in wider strategic and economic debates that
will play out, ultimately, in each side’s domestic politics and are bigger than
bilateral relations per se. In the United States, these include the future of
American manufacturing, competitiveness and innovation. In China, they include
the pace and scope of economic rebalancing, and whether (and when) to knuckle
under to international pressure on China’s industrial, regulatory and currency
policies.
Put simply, while the United States and
China are interdependent, a growing number of stakeholders on both sides find
that reality thoroughly disquieting.
Chinese industrial policy starkly
illustrates this: while some Americans, including Trump, have continued to emphasize China’s
currency policies, that issue is fading as Beijing has sustained a gradual
appreciation of the yuan. Instead, China’s industrial policies will rise to the
fore, especially its use of regulatory tools to restrict foreign competition
and support the growth of Chinese national champion firms, both state-owned and
private. And those tensions will be tougher still because they strike at the
core of each country’s economic competitiveness.
China’s ability to compete with U.S. firms
has improved faster in some areas than many had anticipated. From high-speed
rail to nuclear power plants, China’s capacity to digest foreign technology,
reengineer it to Chinese specifications and then produce (but as a lower-cost
competitor) has unnerved a host of foreign companies, who now question the
wisdom of transferring technology to China. The underlying fear is that if
China can quickly produce substitutable (but cheaper) products, then foreign
firms will be marginalized.
Even with a tougher U.S. posture, it will
be difficult to coordinate actions and responses, as the complexities of this
Chinese challenge vary across sectors and affect distinct firms differently.
The good news is that while economic
integration has not alleviated U.S.-China security competition, the economic
relationship, although contentious, is changing from the heavily
trade-dominated relationship that was the focus of Trump’s campaign to one that
also includes substantial direct investment.
Unlike trade, which involves buying and
selling at the border, or bond holdings, which can be bought or sold through a
quick paper transaction, direct investments involve people, plants and other
assets. They are, in that sense, a vote of confidence in another country’s
economic system since they take time both to establish and unwind. And they
create more direct ties between two economies.
The growing role of investment, then, will
give the two sides another bite at the apple—a chance to test if a more direct
form of economic linkage, especially if it creates jobs in the United States,
can build a more enduring foundation.
The U.S. debate about investment is likely
to grow contentious, in part, because some sectors in the United States that
are open to Chinese firms are not open in a reciprocal way to American
investment there. This is fueling debates about a need for greater reciprocity.
Moreover, the murky governance of China’s state-owned enterprises makes their
acquisition of publicly traded U.S. companies both sensitive and, in some
cases, deeply problematic.
What is needed is a serious process that
shifts the U.S. emphasis from defense to offense—from reactively lawyering
specific trade cases and debating this-or-that tariff to a systematic and
proactive effort to align with Chinese economic reformers who can promote
change within, and extract concessions from, their system.
In recent years, Washington has used
negotiations over a potential bilateral investment treaty (BIT) as precisely
such a lever to open up closed sectors of the Chinese economy. A BIT remains a
useful tool but, with the Senate unlikely to approve a treaty, a more realistic
step in the administration’s first months would be to begin an intensive
bilateral negotiation process that offers more in exchange for real reform and
opening, but would exact real consequences for a failure to move.
In that way, punishments and consequences
would be a function of failed negotiation, not just of unilateral action. It
would establish a firmer footing for bargaining between the two governments.
And Washington could logically focus such an effort on market access in sectors
where the United States is most competitive—for instance, services, healthcare
and technology. Chinese economic reformers do not always welcome foreign
competition, but they do certainly understand the importance of competition in
the economy generally. And this is especially important because some reforms
are being rolled back or are proceeding too slowly. Put bluntly, statism is
advancing in too many areas of China’s economy. By using a negotiation to link
market access to competition policy, U.S. negotiators could help invest Chinese
reformers in a renewed push to foster it. Ultimately, more competition would
benefit Chinese private-sector firms, help reformers break down state-led
oligopolies, expose state firms to the discipline of the market, help make the
market “decisive” in China’s economy (a goal the Chinese Communist Party itself
set
at a November 2013 plenum) and, ultimately, benefit both countries.
A SECOND challenge Trump will face is that
even when Beijing and Washington share interests, these are, too often, overly
general in nature—“peace,” “stability,” “security,” “nonprovocation” and so on.
Often, the two sides fall flat when trying to turn their common interests into
complementary policies.
The United States and China actually have
a long history of cooperating around the world, including in sensitive regions
around China’s periphery.
Consider Afghanistan. Recent strains belie
the degree to which Beijing and Washington worked jointly to defeat the Soviet
occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. The United States encouraged Chinese
support for the Afghan mujahideen, and the two countries cooperated in other
novel ways during the conflict.
Today, by
contrast, the two capitals are often at loggerheads in such places. For
instance, before Myanmar’s political transition to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s
government, U.S. officials argued that Beijing’s policies only helped to
bolster the ruling junta. Likewise, Americans argue that Chinese trade and
investment policies shield North Korea from the effects of the very
international sanctions Beijing voted for.
For their
part, Chinese officials view U.S. policies in some of these countries as naïve
at best, destabilizing at worst. In Central Asia, for example, while serving as
deputy assistant secretary of state for the region in 2006 and 2007, I heard
Chinese officials argue ad infinitum that U.S. actions to promote political
reform would ultimately “destabilize” these countries.
Does
coordination really have to be so hard? The challenge for Trump’s
administration is threefold.
First,
the two countries need to better align their threat assessments. So for all
that Washington may have security tensions with China, what is needed is a more
intensive strategic and contingency planning discussion. Beijing, quite simply,
does not share American assessments of the scope and urgency of some important
threats. And China’s leaders, even when they do sense a challenge to
“stability,” are more relaxed about them than Americans.
This is
true of Pakistan, where Beijing tends to trust the military’s instincts
implicitly. It is true of Iran. And it is true of North Korea. Few Chinese
believe Kim Jong-un’s regime will collapse. Beijing will not push Pyongyang
over the precipice and retains hope for a managed transition toward
Chinese-style reform.
Second,
even when Beijing shares Washington’s sense of threat, countervailing interests
can obstruct cooperation. In Afghanistan, China has certainly shared America’s
core interest in a stable Afghan state that does not harbor, nurture or export
terrorism. But Chinese decisionmakers were never comfortable in the 2000s with
NATO access arrangements across China’s western border in pursuit of this
objective, much less enhanced U.S. strategic coordination with neighbors that
have difficult relations with Beijing.
Third,
the administration needs to overcome the contradictory U.S. and Chinese ranking
of shared objectives. In North Korea, both value stability and denuclearization,
but China values stability much more, while the United States has been prepared
to risk some stability to achieve denuclearization.
To deal
with these obstacles, Washington and Beijing badly need a track record of
concrete successes in places where shared strategic interests exist but are
often too abstract.
Doing so
will not require joint projects and actions, merely complementary ones. Take,
for instance, counternarcotics in Afghanistan and Central Asia: China works
bilaterally and through the Shanghai Cooperation Organization; the United
States works mostly bilaterally through security assistance and capacity
building. Washington and Beijing do not need joint efforts to pursue their
shared goal, just to coordinate areas of focus, direct their financial
assistance at similar drugs-related goals, and build complementary capacity
while maintaining separate efforts.
ULTIMATELY,
THE global arena, not East Asia, is likely to be more conducive to near-term
cooperation. And while global cooperation cannot mitigate security tensions in
the Pacific, it will further enlarge the field for action.
To deploy
an American baseball metaphor, such cooperation does not always mean the two
sides should “swing for the fences.” Often, the United States has sought
cooperation with China around the world, but failed. By working on more
peripheral issues, the two countries have a chance to work over time toward
more significant strategic ones.
In
particular, better coordinating some international economic policies will
likely prove easier than coordinating security policies. One example would be
to encourage even more coordination between the international financial
institutions and the new China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Even if the United States does not join the AIIB, it can encourage and promote
cofinancing of projects via its voting weight and project support to more
established structures. This would provide the United States and China with
some multilateral “cover,” and thus prove easier than coordinating bilaterally.
Another
example would be to jointly shape investment standards in other countries and
regions, like Africa. China’s arrival as a trader, investor, lender and builder
has dramatically changed the economic environment around the world because,
while Chinese investors are not oblivious to the challenges of doing business
in, say, Papua New Guinea or Niger, they have taken on risks where American,
Japanese and European firms have not. And China has already displaced other,
more traditional partners across an array of sectors.
Chinese
strategies are hardly uniform. Nor have they proved to be uniformly successful.
Resources for infrastructure deals have benefited Chinese construction,
telecommunications and hydropower companies. But Chinese oil and mining
companies have failed to dominate Africa’s extractive industries, for example.
And significant infrastructure investments in mineral-rich countries have not
given Chinese firms a preferential position.
Many American analysts take for granted
that Chinese companies can bear more risk, or that Beijing will underwrite the
kind of risks that other governments shy away from. But as China’s reach grows,
its economic incentive to revisit these practices may expand, not least to
protect its own investments. Chinese companies no longer operate alone in many
places, and are seeking partnerships—first to acquire technology, second to
share risk, and third to connect to new skills and industry practices. The
Chinese even surprised their State Department counterparts in a mid-2000s round
of policy-planning discussions by asking about the good-governance provisions
in President Bush’s Millennium Challenge development fund.
Chinese firms, backed by state loans, face
growing constraints in countries that have stringent local content rules. So
there are limits to China’s traditional approach: The weaker the state, the
more appealing is China’s model of trading loans and infrastructure for
resources. But the stronger the state, the more wary countries are likely to be
of falling into a debilitating trap of dependence.
And that opens up some potential space for
the United States and China (and third parties) to work jointly on standards,
investment models and other issues in partnership.
THE BOTTOM line is that President Trump
will face a tougher challenge with Beijing than have his eight predecessors
since the 1972 Nixon opening. China is now weightier, more influential around
the world, better able to resist or retaliate against U.S. pressure, and has
more tools of economic statecraft and military power than ever before.
This means that Washington needs to move
from reactive to activist in its approach to both China and Asia. After all,
for much of the last decade—and with the exception of the now-shelved TPP—the
United States has too often found itself acting in response to a Chinese
initiative.
The AIIB is just one example. The United
States offered no distinctively “American” model of infrastructure finance for
Asia, failed to complete governance reforms in the existing international
financial institutions, chose to forego the opportunity to shape the bank early
on, and then discouraged its allies and others from joining. The result was
that Washington was left responding to a Chinese initiative (and ended up
isolated from nearly all of its allies) rather than setting the action agenda
itself. Likewise in the South China Sea: the United States increasingly seems
to conduct freedom-of-navigation operations in response to Chinese
island building or other actions, rather than as a function of strategy.
American interests in the Pacific have
been consistent for more than a century: open markets; open regionalism;
freedom of navigation; no exclusionary blocs or dominant regional hegemons that
might exclude the United States; support for political and economic openness;
and, in the postwar period, support for allies.
It would be the height of irony if the
United States, Asia’s principal champion of openness since the nineteenth
century, begins to close itself off from the region. If the new administration
pursues tough-minded, productive relations with China, but anchors it very
firmly within this larger context of strategy in Asia, then it will be off to a
realistic start.
Evan A. Feigenbaum is vice chairman of the
Paulson Institute at the University of Chicago. During the George W. Bush
administration, he served as deputy assistant secretary of state for South
Asia, deputy assistant secretary of state for Central Asia, and on the
secretary of state’s policy planning staff with principal responsibility for East
Asia and the Pacific.
No comments:
Post a Comment