OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
China’s Leaders Are Having Fun With Us. Who Can
Blame Them?
Sept. 21,
2021
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/21/opinion/china-biden-australia-tpp.html
Anyone who
says that China’s President Xi Jinping does not have a sense of humor is
definitely not following the news from the Pacific these days.
China last
week applied for membership in the Trans-Pacific Partnership — the trade deal
that was originally negotiated by President Barack Obama precisely to counter
China’s economic power in the Pacific. Unfortunately, President Donald Trump
promptly tore it up rather than learn what it was about and get Congress to
ratify it, and the Democrats have since then made no move to revive the deal,
known as the TPP.
Beijing
applying to join the TPP is the diplomatic equivalent of the U.S. asking to be
a member of China’s “belt and road” trade and investment initiative in Asia, or
Russia applying to be a member of the new NAFTA because it controls part of the
Arctic north of Canada. In other words, a deliciously mischievous ploy.
But it’s a
ploy that exposes a real weakness in U.S. foreign policymaking toward China,
which has become the biggest challenger to American pre-eminence in setting the
rules of today’s international system in both trade and diplomacy.
China’s
announcement came the day after Britain, the U.S. and Australia took
geopolitical competition with China to a new level by announcing a historic
security pact to help Australia deploy the most advanced nuclear-powered
submarines, to counter Beijing’s growing naval clout in the Asia-Pacific
region.
But we need
a strategy for not just containing China with submarines that could take years
before going on patrol. We need a strategy for changing China’s behavior today,
which is what the TPP was partly designed to do.
China was
never formally excluded from the TPP by its Obama administration designers. But
the message to Beijing was: If you want to be part of this American-crafted
21st-century trade pact, you have to play by our rules. That’s why reformers in
China were intrigued by the TPP — they saw it as a lever to open the Chinese
system — and hard-liners feared it more than submarines.
But after
the U.S.-U.K.-Australia sub deal, the Chinese obviously said to themselves:
“Let’s have some fun. After the Americans were so stupid as to never join the
trade pact that they designed to keep us out, America in and its Pacific allies
close, the 11 other partners went ahead without them. They even renamed it the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).
So, let’s try to use the attraction of easier access to China’s giant market to
take over the TPP on our terms instead of America’s! And what better way to
counter the American submarine deal with Australia?”
It was a
brilliant move. As The Wall Street Journal reported last Friday: “A decade ago,
it was a trade club led by the U.S. seeking to limit the influence of China’s
economic model. Now Washington is out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and
Beijing wants in — as the group’s biggest member.”
While
China’s admittance is not likely anytime soon (it requires unanimous consent of
the members), just by applying Beijing is exposing how unserious the American
far left and far right are when it comes to China. They rail against Beijing’s
human rights policy and then they block one of America’s most effective tools
to nudge — and that is the most we can ever do — China toward more transparency
and the rule of law, i.e., TPP.
“Reformers
in China carefully monitored the original TPP negotiations with the hope that
China joining the TPP could lead to domestic reforms,’’ said James McGregor,
the chairman of the consultancy APCO Worldwide, Greater China. “Those days are
gone. In its new bid to join, China will likely try to use the lure of its huge
market to entice the other members to live with China meeting some TPP
requirements while muddying others.’’
What makes
this Chinese maneuver more ridiculous is that Trump was so ignorant about the
contents of the TPP before he tore it up — his main objection was surely that
Obama had negotiated it — that when he was first asked about it in a campaign
debate in November 2015, Trump incorrectly suggested that China was in it from
the start. Trump was just ahead of his time!
But Trump’s
foolishness had a lot of tacit support from Bernie Sanders and his fellow
progressives with their knee-jerk opposition to the pact — even though it was
designed by Obama to address all the core labor and environmental issues that
the left did not like about free trade.
Let’s go to
the videotape and recall what the Obama team — not Trump, not the G.O.P. —
O-B-A-M-A — built into the original TPP, which also included Australia, Brunei,
Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and
Vietnam.
One of the
largest multilateral trade agreements ever negotiated, it included restrictions
on foreign state-owned enterprises that dumped subsidized products into our
markets. It detailed intellectual property protections for the newest and most
advanced American-made tech products — like free access for all cloud computing
services, which China restricts. It set out explicit anti-human-trafficking
provisions that prohibited turning guest workers into slave labor. It banned
trafficking in endangered wildlife parts, a practice still common in China that
may have played a role in the pandemic. It required signatories to permit their
workers to form independent trade unions to collectively bargain and to
eliminate all child labor practices.
Indeed,
speaking on a trip to Australia in 2012, then-Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton said that “this TPP sets the gold standard in trade agreements to open
free, transparent, fair trade, the kind of environment that has the rule of law
and a level playing field.” It would build in “strong protections for workers
and the environment. … Respecting workers’ rights leads to positive long-term
economic outcomes, better jobs with higher wages and safer working conditions.”
Typical of
a Democrat, though, candidate Clinton ran away from the deal when she ran
against Trump, rather than explain that some 80 percent of the goods from our
11 would-be TPP partners were already coming into the U.S. duty-free, while our
goods and services were still being hit with some 18,000 tariffs in their
countries — tariffs that the deal would have eliminated. By accounting for 40
percent of global G.D.P., the original TPP would have become a real standards-setter
in the Pacific.
The
Peterson Institute for International Economics estimated that U.S. national
income would also have grown by some $130 billion a year by 2030 with the TPP.
Not huge, but a nice bump.
This is all
the more a tragic comedy because our Pacific allies actually gave America trade
concessions to create the agreement that they would not do before — precisely
because they wanted us in the neighborhood as a bigger economic counterweight
to China’s growing domination. And then we walked away, and now China wants to
take our place — on its terms.
It is not
too late for America to get back into the TPP and even strengthen it by
insisting on stricter rules of origin (which Trump added to the new NAFTA).
This would ensure that if somehow China were admitted to the partnership, it
could not get around U.S. tariffs on certain Chinese exports by moving their
final assembly to Vietnam, while keeping the core value chain in China.
I’ll take
America joining the TPP today over helping to deploy submarines years from now.
By then, if America continues to stay out, the CPTPP surely will be renamed
again. It will have the same initials but they will stand for the “Chinese
People’s Trans-Pacific Partnership.”
Now
wouldn’t that be funny. …
Thomas L.
Friedman is the foreign affairs Op-Ed columnist. He joined the paper in 1981,
and has won three Pulitzer Prizes. He is the author of seven books, including
“From Beirut to Jerusalem,” which won the National Book Award. @tomfriedman
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