Financial Times Europe - 05.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
2 ★ † FINANCIAL TIMES Monday5 August 2019

emboldened by relatively strong jobs
data for July. The Federal Reservecut US
interest rates last weekbut Mr Trump
said it should have cut further.
Beijing expects Mr Trump to face
more domestic resistance in the longer-
term. The new tariffs scheduled for Sep-
tember affect imports of consumer
goods, which could increase the cost of
living just as Mr Trump is gearing up for
the2020 presidential election.
While Beijing has suggested that it
will suspend trade talks in reaction to
the latest threat, it is likely to return to
the negotiating table.
“China’s strategy in this trade war
escalation will be to slow down the pace
of negotiation. This could lengthen the
process of retaliation until the upcoming
US presidential election,” wrote econo-
mist Iris Pangaaat Dutch bank ING. “Is thist Dutch bank ING. “Is this
election interference? Well as they say,
all’s fair in love and (trade) war.”
Additional reporting by Xinning Liu in
Beijing
Editorial Commentpage 16

which has $3.1tn of foreign exchange
reserves, does not appear to be panick-
ing. China’s central bank chief has called
the threshold “just a number”.
“The yuan could break 7 before end of
the year if no progress [is made] in the
trade talks,”said Mr Zhuang, adding
that the event was unlikely to be a major
blow to China’s goal of achieving 6-6.
per cent full-year growth.
Beijing raised tariffson $60bnof US
goods to 25 per cent in June and may be
reluctant to add further tariffs as many
US imports are used to make products
which China then exports.
But it has several other options for
retaliation, ranging from enforcing a
recently announced blacklist of “unreli-
able entities” to restricting exports of
rare earths used by US manufacturers.
Mr Trump has shown no sign of back-
ing down, telling reporters last week: “If
they don’t want to trade with us any
more that would be fine with me.” And
despite signs the trade war is hitting US
manufacturing, Mr Trump will be

As a result, Mr Trump’sannounce-
mentof a 10 per cent levy on an addi-
tional $300bn of exports from Septem-
ber would only reduce Chinese growth
by 0 .1 per cent, according to consul-
tancy Oxford Economics.
A meeting of China’s politburo stand-
ing committee chaired by Mr Xi to
announce economic priorities for the
rest of the year described “growing
downward pressure” on the economy,
but said risks were manageable.
Beijingmade tax cuts and increased
funding for infrastructure at the end of
last year, but has sought to limit stimu-
lus measures to leave room for more
action over the next few months.
“If the tariff round does go ahead and
it lasts more than a few months, it could
trigger a more aggressive stimulus,” said
Bo Zhuang, an economist at TS Lom-
bard.
Stimulus will add to depreciation
pressure on China’s currency,now near
the psychologically important thresh-
old of Rmb7 to the dollar. But Beijing,

TOM HANCOCK— SHANGHAI
JAMES POLITI— WASHINGTON

Donald Trump’s attempt to raise the
stakes in his trade war with Beijing by
threatening new tariffs on Chinese
imports has left the prospect of a deal to
end the dispute looking increasingly
remote.
Mr Trump’s threat of tariffs on
$300bn of imports last Friday
shockedmarkets, destroying the calm
that had set in since bilateraltalks
resumedlast week that were described
by both sides as“constructive”.
Asked why he had followed the meet-
ing with the sudden threat of new tariffs,
Mr Trump saidChina’s President Xi Jin-
ping was “not going fast enough”.
Beijing has vowed to retaliate and its
response could comettthis week. China ishis week. China is
“becoming more hardline”, said Wendy
Cutler, a former senior US trade official
now at the Asia Society Policy Institute
in Washington. “I think this deal is get-
ting harder and harder to bring
together.”
Analysts on both sidesquestionMr
Trump’s tactics. While he hassought to
pressureBeijing by threatening new tar-
iffs several timesin the past year, agree-
ment onissues that matter to the US
such as intellectual property and indus-
trial policy appears little closer.
“Trump is in a rush, but China does
not want to sign a deal without careful
plans,” said Zhu Feng, an international
relations professor at Nanjing Univer-
sity. “China has prepared for extra tar-
iffs already”.
Washington hopesBeijing will be
forced to make concessions because it
fearsthe impact of tariffs on economic
growth, which has fallen to its slowest
pace since the 1990s.
But China’s economic growth,
reported at 6.3 per cent in the first half,
is mainly dependent on expansion in
domestic demand — consumption and
investment —and not exports. Domes-
tic consumption accounted for60 per
centof growth in the first half, according
to the National Bureau of Statistics.

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INTERNATIONAL


AIME WILLIAMS— WASHINGTON
JUDE WEBBER— MEXICO CITY

At least 29 people were killed and doz-
ens wounded in two separate mass
shootings in 24 hours of gun violence in
the US, prompting soul searching and
bitter political recriminations.
The deadliest incident, in El Paso,
Texas, was described by police as a
potential hate crime, leading three
Democratic presidential candidates —
Beto O’Rourke, Pete Buttigieg and Julian
Castro — to accuse the president of
encouraging “white nationalism”. The
Mexican government, meanwhile,

decried “racist discourse” which led to
hate crimes.
The latest shooting happened early
yesterday morning, when nine people
were killed by a man wearing body
armour who opened fire with an assault
rifle with a high-capacity magazine in an
entertainment district of Dayton, Ohio.
Police have revealed few details of the
shooter and no motive.
That came less than 24 hours after the
rampage at a crowded shopping mall in
El Paso, a predominantly Hispanic
Texan city close to the US border with
Mexico, on Saturday, which killed at
least 20 people and wounded 26 others.
Texas court records identified the
gunman as Patrick Crusius, a 21-year-
old white male from Allen, Texas. The
shooting took place at a Walmart store
and elsewhere at the Cielo Vista Mall.

Greg Allen, El Paso police chief, said
the killings could be a potential hate
crime after police officers uncovered “a
manifesto” linked to the suspect.
The anti-immigrant manifesto posted
on social media referred to the “His-
panic invasion of Texas” and expressed
sympathy for the Christchurch mass
killer, whomurdered 51 in New Zea-
land. The document claimed that white
people were being replaced by foreign-
ers. The suspect, who comes from a city
more than 650 miles away from El Paso,
faces several capital murder charges.
Prosecutors said they were treating the
incident as domestic terrorism and
would seek the death penalty.
Beto O’Rourke, who halted his presi-
dential campaigning to return to his
hometown of El Paso, accused President
Donald Trump of being a white nation-

alist who has encouraged racial hatred
in aCNN interview. “I have a responsi-
bility to call that out, to make sure that
the American people understand what
is being done in their name,” he said.
Mexico expressed disgust with what
appeared to be the deliberate targeting
of Hispanics. “Xenophobic and racist
discourse breeds hate crimes. Hispanic
communities contribute enormously to
the American society,” tweeted Martha
Bárcena, Mexico’s ambassador to the
US, adding she had already discussed
the need to deal with such crimes with
US Attorney-General William Barr.
El Paso is a peaceful city compared
with violence-torn Ciudad Juárez just
across the border on the Mexican side,
which was considered the murder capi-
tal of the world nearly a decade ago.
Many Mexicans in border areas can get

permits to cross into the US andregu-
larly shop in large American malls.
Marcelo Ebrard, foreign minister,
called it a “day of mourning for Mexico
and the US”. According to the latest
reports, there were seven Mexicans
injured but he did not specify the
number of dead.
The two shootings were among the
top three deadliest this year, according
to the Gun Violence Archive, which
tracks mass killings. There have been
around 20 mass shootings this year in
which four or more people were killed.
While the Ohio shooter was killed by
police, the El Paso suspect appears to
have surrendered.
Yesterday morning, Mr Trump
tweeted: “God bless the people of El
Paso Texas. God bless the people of
Dayton, Ohio.”

ANDRES SCHIPANI— FLORIANÓPOLIS

Loggers have razed an area of Brazilian
rainforest bigger than Luxembourg
since president Jair Bolsonaro came to
power, heightening fears for his
administration’s custodianship of the
Amazon jungle.

The rate of deforestation in the world’s
largest tropical forest topped 3,926 sq
km last month, according to prelimi-
nary data from the National Institute for
Space Research (INPE), the country’s
space agency.
The deforestation in July, which fol-
lowed sharp year-on-year rises in May
and June, was the largest since Mr Bol-
sonaro’s term started in January and the
biggest in a single month for almost two
years.
The pace of destruction has sparked
tensions between indigenous people
who live in protected areas of the Ama-
zon, and land-grabbers spurred by what
they believe is tacit backing from the
rightwing Mr Bolsonaro.
It has also provoked global criticism,
in part because the 6.7m sq km ecosys-
tem plays a vital role in absorbing car-
bon dioxide emissions and stabilising
global temperatures, scientists say.
Following the recent signing of a trade
deal between the South American Mer-
cosur bloc and the EU, French President
Emmanuel Macron warned that imple-
mentation of the accord was contingent
upon Brazil adhering to the Paris cli-
mate accord — a pact that Mr Bolsonaro
had talked about leaving.
The combative president has also
clashed with the INPE over the deforest-
ation data, accusing the agency — which
tracks rainforest clearing via satellite
imaging — of inflating its figures.
“What we do not want is negative
propaganda for Brazil,” he said last
month, calling for tighter checking of
the official data. His government criti-
cised the data again on Thursday, add-
ing that it would develop a new system
to measure clearings in the rainforest.
On Friday, the head of the INPE,
Ricardo Galvão, said he had been sacked
over the deforestation spat.
Paulo Barreto, senior researcher at
Imazon, an environmental research
group, said: “It is typical of Bolsonaro to
question the data. The president’s
aggressiveness towards environmental
agencies is strengthening the culture of
impunity that’s already spreading in the
Amazon region.”
Mr Bolsonaro advocates opening up
protected sections of the Amazon to
commercial activity and expressed
hope of appointing one of his sons as
ambassador to the US towoo mining
investors. The rainforests have long
been coveted by the agribusiness sector
and other industries.
But environmentalists warn that Mr
Bolsonaro’s pledges to open up reserved
areas for development while rolling
back environmental protections would
further embolden loggers, wildcatmin-
ers and ranchers keen to profit from
deforestation.
The Amazon is home to roughly half
the world’s remaining tropical forests
and about 10 per cent of all known spe-
cies on earth. An area of Brazilian rain-
forest bigger than a football pitch is
razed every minute, environmental
activists say.

Gun violence


US shootings spark anger and blame


Mexico criticises rise of
‘racist discourse’ after mass

killings in Texas and Ohio


Brazil


Destruction


of rainforest


increases


sharply under


Bolsonaro


China-US talks.Pressure on Beijing


New Trump threat risks prolonging trade war


Xi ‘is not going fast enough’,


says the president, but


retaliation could be swift


SUE-LIN WONG, DON WEINLAND
AND JOSEPH LEAHY— HONG KONG

Hong Kong is preparing for its first gen-
eral strike in over 50 yearstoday as
unrest spreadsafter another weekend
of sometimes violent protests.

The planned strike, which organisers
say will affect industries from finance to
technology, is expected to highlight how
anti-government discontent is growing
among working professionals.
Hong Kong is sufferingits worst politi-
cal crisis sincethe 1997 handover.
The unrest was sparked by opposition
to a proposed extradition bill, but pro-
testers’ demands haveexpandedto calls
for democratic reforms and an inde-
pendent inquiry into police brutality.
A large strike“would be incredibly
significant because Hong Kong has
never had anything like it”, said Antony
Dapiran, who has written a book on the
history of dissent in Hong Kong.
“There hasn’t been a general strike [in
Hong Kong] since the 1960s when the
Beijing-controlled unions called the
strikes”, he said, adding that even basic
strike actionswere very unusual in the
Asian financial hub.

Today’s strike has been heavily pro-
moted across the city, with protesters
spray-painting the strike date “08.05”
on buildings and road barriers in Kow-
loon, where there wereclashes between
police and protesters at the weekend.
Yesterday China’sstate news agency
Xinhua condemned the escalating
unrest in Hong Kong, specifically criti-
cising protesters who threw the Chinese
national flag into the harbour. “The cen-
tral government will not sit by idly and
allow the situation to continue.”
Fierce clashesyesterday marked the
fourth straight day of protests. Hun-
dreds of employees from Hong Kong’s
banking and finance sectors gathered
on Thursday for a brief “flash mob” pro-
test while thousands of civil servants
staged a rally of their own on Friday.
Protesters said the strikewas needed
to force the government to come to the
table. “In Hong Kong, the government is
more concerned about the economy,”
said one protester who asked to be iden-
tified as Catherineyesterday in Tseung
Kwan O, a suburb.One street away, pro-
testers applauded as some pelted the
police station with bricks, breaking win-
dows.

Turnout fortoday’s strike across
Hong Kong’s financial sector will be an
indicatorof support among higher-in-
come employees in one of the city’s most
important industries.
Thebattle between protesters and the
government ishurting Hong Kong’s
economy. Iris Pang, an economist at
Dutch bank ING, has lowered her out-
look for GDP growth for the year from
1.8 per cent to 1 per cent.
Standard Chartered, one of the largest
financial companies in the city, has indi-
cated some tolerance for bankers par-
ticipating in the strike. “I think we
respect our staff’s rights to express their
opinion, but at the same time we see

that it is very important for us to main-
tain stable and good service in our net-
work,” said Mary Huen, chief executive
of Standard Chartered Hong Kong. “We
trust our people’s professionalism in
handling the situation.”
A 34-year-old HSBCemployee said
the bank had not officially sanctioned
the strikebut some managers had told
stafforally that they would not be penal-
ised for not coming to work. An HSBC
spokesman said: “We respect that our
employees have their own personal
views on political and social matters.
Our priorities are the safety of our
employees and supporting our custom-
ers.”
Hong Kong’s conglomerates have tra-
ditionally had little appetite for strikes
and union activities.Buttoday some of
the city’s biggest companies will take a
softer approach.One executive at acon-
glomerate said last week thatit would
not discouragestaff from attending the
strike, nor would it promote the activity.
Employees who chose not to come to
worktoday could count it as a “work
from home” day.
Additional reporting by Primrose
Riordan

Political crisis


Hong Kong braced for its first general strike in half a century


A protester aims a slingshot during
fierce clashes yesterday

‘I think this
deal is

getting
harder and

harder to
bring

together’


Wendy Cutler

Face-off:
US President
Donald Trump,
left, shakes
hands with his
Chinese
counterpart
Xi Jinping
during a
meeting on the
sidelines of the
G-20 summit in
June— Susan Walsh/AP

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