The Economist - UK (2022-03-19)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist March 19th 2022 Finance & economics 65

identified  the  dilemma:  “If  you  open  the
window  for  fresh  air,  you  have  to  expect
some flies to blow in.”
Another, bigger worry relates to power.
Being  part  of  global  supply  chains  means
being  vulnerable  to  sanctions.  This  was
clear  from  an  early  stage.  In  1989  China
faced sanctions after the crackdown in Tia­
nanmen  Square.  The  next  year  America
placed  Cuba,  El  Salvador,  Jordan,  Kenya,
Romania  and  Yemen  under  sanctions  for
various  infractions.  Several  rounds  of
Western sanctions on Russia, first in 2014
and  then  again  today,  bring  the  message
home still more forcefully. 
Already there is evidence of a crude de­
coupling. In 2014 America banned Huawei,
a  Chinese  tech  firm,  from  bidding  on
American  government  contracts.  In  2018
Mr  Trump  started  a  trade  war  with  China,
with the goal of forcing it to make changes
to  what  America  said  were  “unfair  trade
practices”, including the theft of intellectu­
al  property.  fdi flows  between  China  and
America  are  now  just  $5bn  a  year,  down
from nearly $30bn five years ago.
Recent  policy  announcements  and
trade deals shed some light on the probable
direction  of  globalisation  as  the  world’s
most  powerful  democracies  and  autocra­
cies turn away from each other. Countries
are signing smaller, regional trade deals in­
stead;  democracies  are  banding  together,
as are autocracies; and many countries are
also seeking greater self­reliance. 
Begin  with  regional  trade  deals,  the
number of which is booming. In 2020 Chi­
na  signed  an  agreement  with  14  other
Asian countries, mostly non­democracies.
In that year the asean group of South­East
Asian  countries  became  China’s  biggest
trading partner, replacing the eu. In Africa,
meanwhile,  most  countries  have  ratified
the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Countries with shared political systems
are  also  coming  closer.  The  CoRe  Partner­
ship,  an  agreement  between  America  and
Japan,  launched  last  year  and  is  designed
to  promote  co­operation  in  new  technol­
ogies  from  mobile  networks  to  biotech.
The us­eu Trade and Technology Council,
the  pointed  ambition  of  which  is  to  pro­
mote  “the  spread  of  democratic,  market­
oriented  values”,  is  working  on  climate
change and strengthening supply chains.
Autocracies are also forming their own
blocs.  The  stock  of  long­term  investment
from the autocratic world into China rose
by over a fifth in 2020, even as the amount
of investment from autocracies into Amer­
ica  barely  budged.  Saudi  Arabia  is  report­
edly  mulling  selling  oil  to  China  in  yuan,
rather than dollars. Long­term investment
from autocracies into increasingly illiberal
India rose by 29% in 2020. 
Large  countries  in  particular,  mean­
while, are also turning inward. A big focus
of President Joe Biden’s administration, for


instance,  is  “supply­chain  resilience”,
which in part involves efforts to encourage
domestic production. China’s turn in 2020
towards  a  “dual  circulation”  strategy  in­
cludes  an  attempt  to  rely  less  on  global
suppliers. It wants to release its rivals’ grip
on  “chokehold”  industries,  such  as  chip­
making equipment, which it fears could be
used  to  strangle  its  rise.  India,  too,  has
turned towards self­reliance. 
Many  of  these  efforts  could  come  at  a
price. Autocracies are notoriously prone to
pursuing  their  own  self­interests,  rather
than banding together. History shows that
withdrawing from global trade and invest­
ment networks carries huge costs. In 1808
America came close to autarky as a result of
a  self­imposed  embargo  on  international
shipping.  Research  by  Douglas  Irwin  of
DartmouthCollegesuggeststhattheban
costabout8%ofAmerica’sgrossnational
product.Morerecently,manystudieshave

found that it was primarily American firms
that paid for Mr Trump’s tariffs. Brexit has
slowed growth and investment in Britain. 
Russia’s  attempt  at  self­reliance,  by
pursuing  import  substitution  on  a  large
scale,  building  up  foreign­exchange  re­
serves and developing parallel technologi­
cal networks, shows just how hard it is to
cut  yourself  off  from  the  global  economy.
Sanctions by the West rendered much of its
reserves  useless  overnight  (see  Button­
wood).  The  economy  was  struggling  even
before  the  war,  and  has  since  gone  off  a
cliff. Unemployment is likely to soar as for­
eign firms leave the country. 
The risk, though, is that countries draw
the  opposite  lesson  from  Russia:  that  less
integration,  rather  than  more,  is  the  best
way to protect themselves from economic
pain.Theworldwouldbecomemorefrac­
tured and mutually suspicious—not to
mentionpoorerthanit couldhavebeen. n

Covid-19inChina

A deep ditch


W


hen china’s government  said  on
March 5th that it would aim for eco­
nomic growth of 5.5% this year, the target
looked  demanding.  Now  it  looks  almost
fanciful.  On  March  14th  China  recorded
5,370 new cases of covid­19. That would be
a  negligible  number  in  many  countries.
But in China it is an intolerable threat to its
cherished  zero­covid  policy.  The  bulk  of
the cases are in the north­eastern province

of  Jilin,  which  has  gone  into  a  full  lock­
down.  But  lockdowns  of  varying  severity
have  also  been  imposed  in  Shanghai  and
Shenzhen, two cities that account for more
than 16% of China’s exports.
In  Shanghai,  anyone  wanting  to  leave
the city has to show a negative result on a
nucleic­acid  test  taken  in  the  previous  48
hours.  Parks  and  entertainment  venues
have been closed. Entire blocks of flats are
locked  down  if  anyone  living  in  them  is
suspected of exposure to the virus.
The  restrictions  in  Shenzhen go  fur­
ther. People have been allowed to stock up
on  groceries,  but  must  now  hunker  down
for  a  week  while  they  undergo  three
rounds  of  compulsory  tests.  Everyone
must work from home or not at all, unless
they  help  supply  essential  goods  and  ser­
vicesto the city, or to Hong Kong next door. 
The  lockdowns  pose  an  obvious  threat
to  the  world’s  supply  chains.  Shenzhen
(the  name  of  which  can  be  translated
loosely  as  “deep  ditch”)  accounts  for  al­
most  16% of  China’s  high­tech  exports.
Foxconn, which makes iPhones for Apple,
has  suspended  operations  at  its  plants  in
the  area  for  at  least  the  first  half  of  the
week, according to Reuters. Other links in
the  tech  supply  chain have  also  paused
production. And the wholesale electronics
markets  in  the  Huaqiangbei  neighbour­
hood,  landmarks  of  “low­end  globalisa­
tion”, bustle no more.

H ONG KONG
Will China’s lockdowns add to strains on global supply chains?

Zero covid, zero tolerance
Free download pdf