Dear Larry: China threatens American preeminence and President Trump is right to worry about it. But you’re going about it the wrong way, and your approach will produce results very different from what you expect or want.
When you say: “I do not think President Xi has any intention of following through on any of the discussions we’ve made and I think the President is so satisfied with China on these so-called talks that he is keeping the pressure on and I support that,” Beijing hears: “We can hurt China’s economy so badly by reducing exports to the US that internal political pressure will force President Xi to capitulate.”
This is a very big mistake, for two reasons. The first is that you do not negotiate with China by trying to make its leader lose face.
China’s export dependence on the United States is shrinking, not growing. Most of China’s exports are directed towards Asia.

Asia, moreover, provided the biggest growth margin in China’s exports.

Where are you going to impose tariffs on US imports from China? Americans don’t want to pay higher prices for smartphones, or computers, or display screens, or the other cheap consumer electronics that make the tech boom in American equities possible in the first place.

The vast majority of China’s exports to the US are consumer goods, especially electronics. Most of these goods are assembled in China from imported components. China adds only a third or so the value added to these goods. China has a chronic labor shortage and is shifting low-paid assembly to lower-wage countries in Asia. If you tax consumer goods from China, American consumers will pay more, and the Chinese will accelerate the shift of low-wage employment to the new economic zone they are building in Asia through the $1 trillion One Belt, One Road program.
This transition has been underway for years. Here’s a 2013 chart that I published in a presentation for Reorient Group (now Yunfeng Financial), a Hong Kong investment bank where I was a managing director.

In short, tariffs on consumer goods only will throw Br’er Xi into the briar patch. You’re ten years late and $1 trillion short.
China cheats, China plays dirty, China steals technology, China muscles American companies in joint venture, China does every manner of bad thing. But that’s not the big problem. Don’t worry about the “crown jewels” of American technology, as you said today on CNBC. Those are the old crown jewels. The new crown jewels are coming out of Chinese laboratories.
In 2002, China’s biggest telecom equipment company, Huawei, was caught red-handed with Cisco code, bugs and all. Now Huawei spends more on R&D than Microsoft. It employs thousands of European engineers as well as tens of thousands of Chinese. American graduate programs in math and physics are in trouble because Chinese (and other foreign students) have stopped applying (foreign students now comprise about four-fifths of the graduate students in key STEM faculties). The Chinese aren’t coming to the US anymore because they don’t have to: They can get as good an education in cutting-edge technology at home. If we have lost our edge at the university level, how long will our edge last at the corporate level? There’s virtually no venture capital money going into anything to do with physics. It’s all software.
There’s a bigger issue here, and that’s the failure of American observers to anticipate China’s emergence as the world’s most powerful economy. We couldn’t believe that a state-run economy directed by a Communist Party could succeed. Back in 2001 Gordon Chang published the first edition of his book The Coming Collapse of China. Since then per capital GDP in China has quintupled. In 2015 the whole economics profession thought that China was entering a financial crisis as its reserves fell by $1 trillion—except for the Bank for International Settlements, which explained that Chinese companies repaid $1 trillion of foreign debt with those reserves. China is still growing at 6%-7% a year, which means that its economy doubles in size every decade.
Unlike all the so-called emerging markets of the world—Brazil, Mexico, Turkey, India and so forth—China moved its people from subsistence agriculture to urban employment. 600 million people—the equivalent of two Americas—moved from country to city in the last 35 years. And over that period per capita GDP in China has risen by 45 times – that’s 4,500%.

It’s misleading to speak of a “Chinese model.” This is the Asian model, invented by the Japanese after the restoration of the Emperor Meiji in 1868. By 1905, Japan was able to beat Russia on land and sea; by 1936, it designed and built the world’s best fighter plane, the Mitsubishi Zero. Japan gave us a run for our money in 1941. Of course, Japan’s population was half that of the United States, not to mention our British and other allies. China has four times our population.
The United States is absolutely right to restrict Chinese access to US technology. I have proposed even more stringent measures, for example, 100% US content for any high-tech goods bought by the military. That just buys a little more time. We need to worry less about what technology China may have stolen in the past, and more about what kind of technology it may invent in the future. If China leaps ahead of us in quantum computing—which it is trying hard to do—they will secure an advantage as big as America’s advantage in semiconductors during the 1970s and 1980s. That will be game over.
Don’t hope for a coalition of the willing against China. Europe has already taken the opportunity to cut deals with China behind our backs. Last week, Germany’s top manufacturing companies — Volkswagen, BMW, Daimler, BASF and Siemens — announced tens of billions of dollars of new investments in China as Chinese Premier Li Keqiang posed for a photo op with German Chancellor Merkel in Berlin. BMW will expand its joint venture with Brilliance Auto to produce 519,000 vehicles a year. It also set up a joint venture to produce an electric version of the Mini together with Great Wall Auto. And it agreed to buy $4.7 billion worth of batteries from Chinese producer CATL, which just announced a new plant in southern Germany. Volkswagen earlier this year announced that it would invest $18 billion in China by 2022 and construct six plants to build electric vehicles.
America now has 91 cars for every 100 people. China has 15 cars for every 100 people, and it has four times as many people. Do the math: If China rises to the car ownership level of South Korea (46 cars per 100 people), it will have to produce or import roughly 400 million cars to reach that level. China already is the world’s biggest auto market (GM sells more cars there in the US), and the Germans just got the inside track.
Meanwhile, Europe and Japan have signed the Japan-European Free Trade Agreement, in what Germany’s Der Spiegel calls a “warning” to the US.
The world isn’t lining up with us. It’s lining up against US. China and its One Belt, One Road economic sphere—stretching from Turkey to the Philippines—represents the world’s fastest-growing consumer market. China will open its market selectively, bribing our erstwhile friends and allies. It might take a minor hit to growth (between 0.5% and 1% of GDP growth per year, according to most estimates), but it will survive a trade war with the US with an expanded Asian market.
The Chinese dragon does have a point of vulnerability, and that is innovation. During the 1960s and 1970s, the United States invented CMOS chip manufacturing, LED screens, the semiconductor laser, and the whole array of technologies that created the digital age. We have made marginal improvements on these technologies but haven’t invented anything really new for half a century.
I’ll repeat what Dr. Henry Kressel and I proposed in the Wall Street Journal right after Trump was elected:
First, encourage innovation, which is the precondition for economic growth. The U.S. can’t bring back most of the jobs it has lost, but Americans can create new and better ones. It goes without saying that Washington should aggressively defend intellectual property rights and enforce anti-dumping laws. But that isn’t enough.
Although private investors should take all the risks in commercializing new technology, federal R&D support is key. The civilian spinoffs of defense research gave us many of the new products of the past 30 years. Yet federal R&D spending as a share of the economy has fallen almost in half, to 0.73% of GDP in 2013 from 1.2% in 1987, at the peak of Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative. The next administration should raise R&D spending back to 1.2% of GDP by 2018.
Second, ensure that the resulting innovation turns into American jobs. High-tech is capital intensive, and modern manufacturing is expensive. But CEOs have learned that the market rewards companies that are light on capital investment and big on share buybacks. To change this behavior, lawmakers could give companies tax incentives to invest in capital assets in the U.S.
Washington should also enforce strict U.S. content rules for sensitive defense technology. Many of the Pentagon’s military systems depend on imported components. That’s a concern on security grounds alone. Procurement rules should be changed to require that critical components be manufactured in the U.S….
When Russia took a lead in the space race with the 1957 launch of Sputnik, the U.S. responded with aggressive support for science and engineering education. That helped make America the world’s leader in innovation. This should be a Sputnik moment. High schools could offer intensive training in science, technology and math. The U.S. should develop—with local, state and federal support—technical institutes on the German model to channel students into corporate internships and, ultimately, well-paid industrial jobs. Americans are at a turning point. They can either resign themselves to decline or revive their country’s industrial pre-eminence.
Your friend,
Dave

Kurt Schoedel Oh right, the usual conspiracy theorist.
Syed Abbas Debate ? No, I’m just poking fun and your sad self-delusions.
US drops a bomb every 12 minutes on people they have not declared war against. If China propose to supply inputs for the bombs, US will impose zero tariffs.
EU’s refugee problem is caused by unending US wars in the Mid East and in Afghanistan. They are fed up with the US and prefer to trade.
Indeed, there’s nothing to worry about, but let’s not give the game away now, right?
Forget China they even forgot about themselves…
And talk about Karma being a bitch, all that war distraction ignited by Islamic fundamentalist group they themselves armed to begin with. Got bitch slapped back BIG TIME there and only themselves to blame.
No kidding James. The decline started long ago……now its just visibly obvious.
They were too busy with their wars and regime change experiments that they forgot about China.????
Kurt Schoedel
Makes sense. Thanks.
Ivor Large
You really think I will pick up a dialog with you to give you legitimacy? Keep on dreaming, lol.
America is too controlled to make a turn around on innovation. We are headed for service economy and will be good at deluvery such as Uber, Amazon drivers and UPS. We are not producing intelligent and bright students but Lawyers, low end business degrees and low level technicians that are controlled by bright Indians remotely. On top of all this, we are too involved in wars for Israel and feeding the military industrial complex. This whole population of low IQ America now lives pay check to pay check and too brained washed to make a real change.
Ivor Large My friend used a testing service here in the U.S. to make sure that what he received was indeed what he ordered. You always want to test any compounds you order from Chinese suppliers.
I bet the Wumaos are having wet dreams reading this. BRI is a joke, small (well it’s Chinese so definitely small) volumes easily obstructed by warlords, choke-points in Indonesia, surrounding nations that hate and fear China and Chinese (because the local Chinese are smart and hard working).
Innovation flourishes in freedom, Nazi Germany appeared to be strong, but had lost the best scientists to the W. The good guys that were left ‘were only obeying orders’ and scared to disobey their leaders.
When China’s grown slows, or Taiwan declares independence and the CCP can do nothing….. end of CCP.
Me thinks, disinformation by Spengler.
Poetry, more like describing a few beers after a night out…. chinese bladder !
Oh right, have you heard about the tainted milk products in China ?
But you’ve been ‘teaching’ them, are you to blame ?
I don’t think the US is psychologically prepared to lose the position of the largest power in the world. However, that’s where we are going, the correlation of forces around the world is moving against the United States and there is not much it can do about it.
The Chinese are also moving ahead in bioengineering as well. Beijing Genomic Institute is one such example. A friend of mine recently sourced compounds for a new senolytics therapy (an anti-aging therapy that works by destroying senecent cells in the body) he developed from Chinese suppliers.
Good poetry.
Innovation – easy said than done. Not a magic wand.
Innovation needs a certain mindset – Individualism, freedom, less regulation, skill availability, absence of fear – all increasingly lacking in America.
Business too regulated, hands tied up, moving abroad.
Labor with skills is extinct. Shools output youth that neither read nor count, unfit for university. A NY colleague lamented he enjoys teaching (STEM) nomore as locals do not catch what he says, so he concentrates on a handful of foreign students. His faculty is planning "remedial reading" at gradute level next year. When asked how come they got their batchelors? "Pushed through"!!! America now gives you a degree without knowledge.
More importantly, fear that FDR warned against. After 1989 Soviet demise the Corporate Capitalist Democracies (CCD) strutted around the globe with head in clouds that it was end of history: Capitalism had won. This balloon of arrogance was punctured, nay blown up, by a sick-man sitting in the mountains far-away. Now a civilization unsure of its future, with security spending outpacing health, education, and welfare put together, instill yet more fear. DHS is the largest Dept of govt – just like peak of Soviet Union when half worked for Security Agencies, watching the other half – full employment, but no innovation.
University, the elitist backbone of Corporate Capitalism, is a killing field. The Primal Question of Existence is Survival, Growth, Evolution, and the fearful do not create. From Growth and Evolution, they downgrade themselves to Survival.
My 7th century great-great … grandfather Ali bin Abi Talib (google him) advised us not to fear anything but our sins. Sins of Corporate Capitalist West over the past 3 centuries are endless – rape of the new world, pushing opium on China, de-industrialization and de-population on India, slavery of Africa, overthrow of democratically elected governments in Asia. Samuel Huntington, West’s Prophet of Doom factually put that the West won by organized violence.
The paranoia based on fear of past sins will continue, nay increase. There will come a time that a Westerner will be afraid of his own shadow. Innovation is the thing of the past.
The course of the Chinese economy is like the water of a very large river rushing downward at the top of a high mountain. It is impossible for anyone or any country to stop or even to slow the flow of the water.
On the other hand, the course of the US economy is like a slow flowing water that has almost reached the sea. The flow is dying.