세계 / Global

Call It “Decoupling” Or “De-Risking”, US Economic War Against China Do…

Call It “Decoupling” Or “De-Risking”, US Economic War Against China Doomed To Backfire

Click to see the full-size image

Written by Uriel Araujo, researcher with a focus on international and ethnic conflicts.

At the G7 summit in Hiroshima, much was talking about “de-risking” from China – which seems to be the new preferred terminology. The summit joint statement said:

“we are not decoupling or turning inwards. At the same time, we recognise that economic resilience requires de-risking and diversifying.”

In the same spirit, US President Joe Biden, on May 21, stated: “we’re not looking to decouple from China, we’re looking to de-risk and diversify our relationship with [it].”  The US state department describes “de-risking” somewhat more clearly as “the phenomenon of financial institutions terminating or restricting business relationships with clients or categories of clients to avoid, rather than manage, risk.”

Journalists Keith Johnson and Robbie Gramer in turn, writing for Foreign Policy, define de-risking this way:

“decoupling refers to the deliberate dismantling and eventual re-creation elsewhere of some of the sprawling cross-border supply chains that have defined globalization and especially the U.S.-China relationship in recent decades.”

“De-risking”, it seems, is about reducing Chinese “control” of global supply chains without isolating it “too much” – however much that is. Diplomatic rhetoric aside, one should understand it as part of the larger context of economic nationalism and economic warfare, while the US considers pivoting to the Pacific. A recent development such as the UK joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership is also part of a deeper anti-Chinese Western strategy, as it is accompanied by other initiatives such as the AUKUS deal – the military alliance that has been described as the “Asian NATO”. Here, geopolitical and geoeconomic agendas converge. There are fractures within the Western bloc, though, as “strategic autonomy” gains momentum within Europe itself.

I’ve written before on how deindustrialization is increasingly seen today as a national security matter. While China appears to have turned geoeconomics into the very center of its geostrategic approaches (deriving political power from economic power),  the US in turn has been weaponizing economic policies and the very world economy and financial system itself.

In today’s world, it is increasingly hard to insulate industries from geopolitical disputes. Beijing aspires to becoming a tech superpower, and the American Establishment simply won’t have it. This is the context of the current chip war, for instance, which is about geopolitics as much as it is about geoconomic competition. The blowback of this warfare is that it has been hurting key US allies, such as Taiwan itself. Washington’s economic policies in that regard can only aggravate the ongoing supply chain crisis and complicate the bottleneck, ultimately hurting the US itself. The United States may try to enforce a blockade of Chinese technology as much as it can, but supply chains remain hard to trace.

Despite all the talk about the wonders of the “post-industrial” world, manufacturing and industrialization still hold the key for the 21st century emerging powers and great powers alike. So-called “neoliberalism” is in fact quite dead, while “old-fashioned” protectionism, subsidies and procurement mandates are on the rise. Economic nationalism is once again relevant; amid the New Cold War, this means one should expect to see an increase in industry and trade wars, as one can already see with Biden’s own subsidy wars against Europe itself. Such a scenario can make economic warfare even more dangerous as it already is, for it potentially turns things into existential challenges for the interested parties. While so much is talked about “de-risking”, it might be particularly risky to corner a great power such as China like this.

As American investor Balaji Srinivasan has recently remarked regarding China, the US simply is not in a position of strength: the Asian giant remains the number 1 trade partner for a large part of the world. It has in fact a larger place in global trade than the US had even in the post-WW2 boom, and US geoeconomic strategy simply does not seem to grasp this hard truth, according to Matthew Pipes who is a managing consultant at the Krebs Stamos Group and also a Fellow at the Bitcoin Policy Institute.

As journalist Gavin Bade writes, in his Politico piece, Washington seems to believe the world can sort itself into “two trading groups”, one led by the US and the other led by China – something which did not come about even during the cold war years. As I have written, emerging powers such as Brazil, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and India are showing the world that a new age of non-alignment and multi-alignment has come to stay – these nations have been successfully avoiding the new cold war trap of “alignmentism”, while successfully pursuing their own interests.

American diplomatic pressures for alignment are thus doomed to backfire – if forced to “pick a side”, most countries may end up “decoupling” from the US instead.

MORE ON THE TOPIC:

The post Call It “Decoupling” Or “De-Risking”, US Economic War Against China Doomed To Backfire appeared first on South Front.

0 Comments
기모 방한 방풍 방수 보온 터치 자전거 스키 겨울장갑
조깅가방 차는 미니힙색 가방 허리에 초경량 힙
프렌즈하트 자수 극세사 니트 아동장갑 205517
귀달이 군밤 모자 남자 여자 겨울 털모자 DD-12480
컴퓨터랜선 15M CAT5E 랜케이블 인터넷선 스위치허브
논슬립 키보드 마우스 장패드 데스크매트
템플러 PD 25W 1포트 가정용 충전기
아이폰 맥새이프 코튼 컬러 소프트 범퍼케이스 iPhone16 15 14 플러스 13 프로 12 미니 11 XS 맥스 XR
철제 티비수납장 낮은 거실장 양문형 티비스탠드
로얄 접이식 의자 진한 밤색
이케아 SAMLA 삼라 수납함 투명 보관함 28x19x14cm 5L
접이식 간이침대 F01 네발형 6단 세발형 5단계 각도조절 폴딩 침대 간병 사무실 독서실 창고 휴대용 침대
노랑골드 호접난 SHoutor6-18
써니텐 파인애플향 250ml (30캔)
웅진 자연은 납작복숭아 340ml x 24PET
헬로카봇 키즈칫솔 1개입 어린이용 유아용

차량용 메탈 주차번호판 휴대폰번호판 블랙
칠성상회
차량용스티커 스티커 초보운전 이쁘게봐주세용 초보
칠성상회

맨위로↑