|
China’s WTO entry has great impact
Beijing(China)—While few doubt
the importance of the September 11 terrorist attacks, analysts say
China’s entry into the World Trade Organization three months later may
eventually be seen as having even greater reverberations.
When China joined the WTO on December 11, 2001, it submitted to a
universal set of rules, signing off sovereignty it had defended fiercely
for millennia, said David Zweig at Hong Kong’s University of Science and
Technology. “China basically accepted the fact that the outside world
could tell it what it could and couldn’t do domestically,” said Zweig,
who heads the university’s Center on China??s Transnational Relations.
“Unless the war on terror continues for a long time and has implications
in terms of further foreign policy intervention by the US, then the
long-term impact of China’s entry into the WTO is greater,” he said. As
the world’s most populous nation marks the fifth anniversary of its
entry into the global trade body, it is time for both the 1.3 billion
Chinese themselves and the rest of the world to take stock of the
changes.
For the well-heeled resident of Beijing or Shanghai, the advantages of
WTO membership are obvious: His imported Mercedes is cheaper; his local
Citibank offers more services; his Wal-Mart sells a wider variety of
products. But China’s entry into the WTO has not just created winners.
Reduced tariffs on agricultural produce have threatened the livelihoods
of hundreds of millions of farmers.
Beyond affecting the individual lives of the Chinese, the WTO has also
profoundly and irreversibly changed the Chinese economy as a whole. “The
biggest transformation has been in the volume of trade,” said Li
Zhongzhou, chief analyst at the Beijing-based EU-China Program for the
Support of China’s Integration into the World Trading System. “And it’s
not just exports that have gone up.”
Overall trade as a percentage of the gross domestic product, a widely
used measure of an economy’s openness to the outside world, has risen
from 44 percent in 2001 to 72 percent today. By comparison, the value of
US trade with the rest of the world is just 21 percent of its gross
domestic product.
The greater openness that WTO membership has entailed has brought net
advantages to the Chinese, but they may soon have to wave goodbye to the
early, easy benefits of accession to the global trading system. “Since
China joined the WTO, its exports have grown at an average rate of 29
percent per year,” said David Dollar, the World Bank country director
for China.
“Part of that is an adjustment to a more open system. But it’s very
unlikely that exports can continue to grow at that rate, now that China
is a very large player in the world market,” he said. Much has been made
of the unemployment that China creates elsewhere with its
hyper-efficient, hyper-cheap labor force. But China, too, has had to
pay.
“In this period of expanding trade, every country has to make some
adjustments. Some of its industries expand and other industries tend to
contract,” said Dollar. “In China, for example, more than 100,000 people
have been released from state-owned banks, as the state-owned banks
adjust to this more competitive environment.”
Anti-dumping cases against China have soared after its entry into the
WTO, and it now accounts for one third of global cases, according to a
recent count. Some observers see this as the last defense put up by
dying industries in the rich world before they succumb to the Chinese
juggernaut.
“When you look at some of the cases against China, you do see very, very
dramatic changes,” said Cliff Stevenson, a British-based consultant and
a recognized expert on anti-dumping cases. “The industries on overseas
markets suddenly find themselves with massive losses in market share.
Sometimes that can be very disruptive,” he said.
China’s entry into the WTO has brought about monumental changes in
global trade flows that it will take a long time to absorb, according to
Stevenson. The anti-dumping cases are part of a painful transition
period as the world grapples with the one-off challenge of accommodating
China’s uniquely sized economy.
“It’s quite hard to predict when the transition will be over, because I
don’t think the world has ever seen anything like this before. We are
talking about more than the short to medium term,” he said.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |