Friday, April 02, 2010

China’s Neo-Colonialism

Gene Zhang under a CC Licence

Thursday, 01 April 2010
Written by Walden Bello
Source: The New Internationalist


On 1 January 2010, the China-ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Free Trade Area went into effect. Touted as the world’s biggest Free Trade Area, CAFTA is billed as having 1.7 billion consumers, with a combined gross domestic product of $5.93 trillion and total trade of $1.3 trillion.

Under the agreement, trade between China and six ASEAN countries (Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand) has become duty-free for more than 7,000 products. By 2015, the newer ASEAN countries (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Burma) will join the zero-tariff arrangement.

The propaganda mills, especially in Beijing, have been trumpeting this new free trade deal as ‘bringing mutual benefits’ to China and ASEAN. A positive spin on CAFTA has also come from President of Philippines, Gloria Arroyo, who hailed the emergence of a ‘formidable regional grouping’ that would rival the US and the European Union.

The reality, however, is that most of the advantages will probably flow to China. At first glance, it seems like the bilateral relationship has been positive. After all, demand from a Chinese economy growing at a breakneck pace was a key factor in Southeast Asian growth beginning around 2003, after a period of low growth following the 1997/1998 Asian financial crisis.

Counting on China

During the current international recession, ASEAN governments are counting on China, whose GDP in the fourth quarter of 2009 rose 10.7 per cent, to pull them out of the doldrums.

Yet the picture is more complex than that of a Chinese locomotive pulling the rest of East Asia along with it on a fast track to economic nirvana.

Low wages, many in Southeast Asia fear, have encouraged local and foreign manufacturers to phase out their operations in relatively high-wage Southeast Asia and move them to China. There appears to be some support for this. China’s devaluation of the yuan in 1994 had the effect of diverting some foreign direct investment (FDI) away from Southeast Asia.

The trend of ASEAN losing ground to China accelerated after the 1997 crisis. In 2000, FDI in ASEAN shrank to 10 per cent of all investment in developing Asia, down from 30 per cent in the mid-1990s. The decline continued in the rest of the decade, with the UN World Investment Report attributing the trend partly to ‘increased competition from China’.

Trade has been another, perhaps greater, area of concern. Massive smuggling of goods from China has disrupted practically all ASEAN economies. For instance, with some 70-80 per cent of shops selling smuggled Chinese shoes, the Vietnamese shoe industry has suffered badly.

Now there are fears that CAFTA will simply legalize smuggling and worsen the already negative effects of Chinese imports on ASEAN industry and agriculture.

For Chinese officials, the benefits to China of free trade with ASEAN are clear. The aim of the strategy, according to Chinese economist Angang Hu, is to more fully integrate China into the global economy as the ‘center of the world’s manufacturing industry’.

A central part of the plan was to open up ASEAN markets to Chinese manufactured products. In light of growing popularity of protectionist sentiments in the US and European Union, Southeast Asia, which absorbs only around 8 per cent of China’s exports, is seen as having tremendous potential to absorb more Chinese goods. China’s trade strategy is described by Hu as a ‘half-open model’ that is ‘open or free trade on the export side and protectionism on the import side’.

Worrying trends

Despite brave words from Arroyo and other ASEAN leaders, it is much less clear how their countries will benefit from the ASEAN-China relationship.

Certainly, the benefits will not come in labour-intensive manufacturing, where China enjoys an unbeatable edge by the constant downward pressure on wages exerted by migrants from a seemingly inexhaustible rural work force that makes an average of $285 a year. Certainly not in high tech, since even the US and Japan are scared of China’s remarkable ability to move very quickly into high-tech industries even as it consolidates its edge in labour-intensive production. Will agriculture in ASEAN be a net beneficiary? China is clearly super-competitive in a vast array of agricultural products, from temperate crops to semi-tropical produce and in agricultural processing.

Despite brave words from Arroyo and other ASEAN leaders, it is much less clear how their countries will benefit from the ASEAN-China relationship
Moreover, even if under CAFTA, ASEAN were to gain or retain competitiveness in some areas of manufacturing, agriculture and services, it is highly doubtful that China will depart from what Hu calls its ‘half-open’ model of international trade.

What about raw materials? Yes, of course, Indonesia and Malaysia have oil that is in scarce supply in China; Malaysia does have rubber and tin and the Philippines has palm oil and metals.

But a second look makes one wonder if the relationship with China is not reproducing the old colonial division of labour, whereby low-value-added natural resources and agricultural products were shipped to the centre while the Southeast Asian economies absorbed high-value added manufactures from Europe and the US.

These trends are likely to accelerate under CAFTA, but with a difference: China will beat out the country’s ASEAN neighbours in achieving control of the domestic market.

To sum up, the trade agreement is likely to disadvantage ASEAN. Even with the temporary exemptions of certain areas from full trade liberalization, ASEAN would be locked into a process where the only direction that barriers to super-competitive Chinese industrial and agricultural goods will go is downwards.
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Walden Bello is a member of the Philippines’ House of Representatives, president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition and senior analyst at Focus on the Global South.

11 comments:

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Anonymous said...

China ,of course,emerges a Tiger in Asea .Its market will dominate the global market.

China learns well from her sister,Japan.

Attitude to works and massive number of population,advance China in such accelerant speed.

No doubt that readily and available technology ,China will conquer economically.

This old strong culture is revived.
The Tiger is out the forest.

India is also in fierce competition.

Where is Cambodia?Will she be revived,or die under the iron grip?
And perhaps scrathed by the tiger's claws.

Neang SA

Anonymous said...

China is not same as Japan.

For China we have;
- One-party system of government
- No regard of human rights to protect workers
- Lack of labor law to protect workers
- Corruption is rampant
- Little regard of the environment protection (e.g. Mekong River Hydro Dams have destroyed the natural flow)
- Manipulate currency to stay competitive
- Nurture rogue nations such as Burma, Sudan, Cambodia, North Korea, Vietnam, etc. in order to do business
- China's economic policy is a rush to make quick bucks! Richer get richer while the poor stay poor. No equity!

Will the rise of China strengthen communist and dictator rules and weaken democracy on Earth?

KHMER Angkor.

Anonymous said...

Hello Neang Sa,

Your comment may only prove half right. First China is anot a tiger. Chinese has claim thenselves as dragon. In the past century, this dragon was sleepy. Now this dragon has waked up and moving. That is why, the whole world has affected by this moving dragon by global financial effect.
The free trade between all Asian economy has been set up about nearly 20 years already which called Apec ( Asian pacific economic corporation ). In this Apec, Cambodia and Lao are not a full member yet. They are still observers. At present, there are 17 countries participate included Australia, New Zealand, Peru, Chili, India, Japan, Skorea, Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei, Indonesia, Mexico, Phillipine, Singapore,Thailand, Burma, Hong Kong.
The free trade will not only with goods and services but with business people traveling to all these countries as well for business purposes with free visa access and with special lane for these Apec travellers in all these countries international airport.
It started with step by step. It is very good for all countries to trade their products without barriors of import taxes. China will be the biggest market for all other country with 1.4 billions consumers. China has now became the largest middle and upper classes society with spending power more than any popuplation of any Nation. So I think it a positiv social and economic development of other countries if they are led by the right leader.
For this century, each country must be led by a right leader with high leadership role in economy and social management. Offcourse, Cambodia will be left behind if the present group of leaders are still there. They need young, energy and honesty with their people.
Now if you are one of the citizen of these economic country, you can travel to any of these countries without a visa. They will issue you a special card and you can travel in and out as many times as you want and you do not need to queue up with others in the immigration and custom area. What a fantastic world of traveling !

Areak Prey

Anonymous said...

not waked!
Is woke

Anonymous said...

You're right! It can be waked.
Sorry my bad..

Anonymous said...

Nope, the emerging TIGER now is Cambodia. Because this month will be the starting the year of TIGER. Hun Sen is starting to getting paranoid now because he will be killed or trial for KR's court.

Anonymous said...

China is on top of the list in the world economy and stabilized country. We Khmerican struggling day and night 1 out of 10 are out of work nowsaday. China is going to invest more $10B in our country so far and want them to turn Koh Kong into Hong Kong.

Anonymous said...

To built Cambodian social development, we should allow them to build housing, shopping, roading, medical centre schools and then sell at cheap price or on term mortgage to Cambodian people so that Cambodian people can live in good quality of life. But if they allow foreign to buy properties in Cambodia then it will be very desastrous, Cambodia will be full of foreigners and Cambodian will be their homemaids. It is about leadership mentality and intelligence. If they are very greeded with moneys then Cambodian will be aervants. But if they honest, Cambodian people will be prospered.
So for this $10 billions in Koh Kong can turn Cambodian into prosperous or can turn Cambodian into a new Hell on earth.

Areak Prey

Anonymous said...

Sorry, China is neither TIGER not DRAGON, my dear friends. As a matter of fact China is a LION on the international political arena. A century ago many a Caucasian stateman,politician, diplomat, and scholar had warned the whole world not to wake up the sleeping Oriental LION in the hope of colonizing an entire China with a shot. Unfortunately the Oriental lion woke up sooner than they had expected, which was a nice surprise and it turned the Western world upside down.....
Money diplomacy is one of China's powerful diplomatic strategies being practiced since the establishment of the Communist regime in 1949. China had help N.Korea in the 50s and N.Vietnam in the 60s to defeat Uncle Sam....
With its recent economic strength China will further expand its influences toward the rest of the world, especial toward Cambodia's corrupt government -- it has chosen the right bait to attract CPP to accept some special deals in secret. Sihanouk,PolPot, and HunSen all are sold cheap to Red China for some good reasons.
For the time being we desperately need a insightful new leader, who is bright enough to prevent CHEN's and YUON's massive aggressions in order to protect our country's interest or Cambodia will be torn into pieces by them sooner or later.
Wake up! All of you -- don't walk straight into the trap of money diplomacy of Red China.

Anonymous said...

shut up, i never heard china colonized any country in the world history! maybe they only colonized viet/youn because viet/youn as a china province anyway!