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  • …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

    Dollar as reserve currency isn't going anywhere?

    --




    Unconventional Wisdom


    A special anniversary report challenging the world's most dangerous thinking.

    JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2011



    Daniel W. Drezner
    Daniel W. Drezner, is professor of international politics at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

    …AND CHINA ISN'T BEATING THE U.S.

    China is a great power in every sense of the word. It is the most populous country in the world. The Middle Kingdom has weathered the Great Recession better than the West. It is developing a blue-water navy to rival the United States in the Pacific. In 2010, China surpassed Japan as the world's second-largest economy. For many Americans, however, this is not enough. Politicians, commentators, and the public believe China has already supplanted the United States to achieve primacy in world politics. This is not only wrong -- it is dangerously wrong.

    According to a November 2009 Pew Research Center survey, 44 percent of Americans believe that China is "the world's leading economic power," compared with 27 percent who name the United States. Elites have fed this mass perception. After a midterm election cycle that featured anti-China ad after anti-China ad, President Barack Obama warned, "Other countries like China aren't standing still, so we can't stand still either." With public perception and political rhetoric like this, it is little wonder that Forbes magazine recently named Chinese President Hu Jintao the world's most powerful individual.

    It's time to make a few things clear. If one measures power strictly according to GDP at market exchange rates, then the United States is roughly 250 percent more powerful than China. If one uses a combination of metrics -- as does, for example, the U.S. National Intelligence Council's 2025 project -- then China possesses a little less than half of America's relative power. Even on the financial side, the U.S. still reigns, and, hype notwithstanding, the dollar is not going anywhere as the world's reserve currency. The renminbi could be an alternative in the far future -- but after the 2008 financial crisis, China is loath to open up its capital markets. Even by the less tangible metrics of soft power, the United States still outperforms China handily in new public opinion surveys from the Pacific Rim by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

    Right now, the United States is vastly more powerful than the People's Republic of China. Anyone telling you otherwise is selling you something.

    Why the massive misperception? In part, people are looking at the wrong measures. China has the world's largest currency reserves, leading many to conclude that Beijing now has the ability to dictate terms to the United States and everyone else. But that just ain't so. The "balance of financial terror" constrains China as well as the United States because China needs American consumers at least as much as the United States needs China to buy its debt.

    No doubt, China amassed more power while American might ebbed over the last decade, and Beijing is now throwing its weight around. But the United States still has a huge lead. As for China's recent bout of belligerence, it has yielded Beijing little beyond Japan releasing a fishing-boat captain -- while pushing South Asia and the Pacific Rim closer to the United States.

    Exaggerating Chinese power has consequences. Inside the Beltway, attitudes about American hegemony have shifted from complacency to panic. Fearful politicians representing scared voters have an incentive to scapegoat or lash out against a rising power -- to the detriment of all.

    Hysteria about Chinese power also provokes confusion and anger in China as Beijing is being asked to accept a burden it is not yet prepared to shoulder. China, after all, ranks 89th in the 2010 U.N. Human Development Index, just behind Turkmenistan and the Dominican Republic (the United States is fourth). Treating Beijing as more powerful than it is feeds Chinese bravado and insecurity at the same time. That is almost as dangerous a political cocktail as fear and panic.

    Daniel W. Drezner, professor of international politics at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy

  • #2
    Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

    The irony of this hack's crap is that he completely ignores the reality that the US - which for 2 decades was the indisputably dominant economy in the world - is no longer the indisputably dominant economy.

    Yes, China is still smaller than the US in many economic factors, and yes China and the US are locked together in Economic MAD as EJ/iTulip noted long ago.

    But to say China's and the rest of the BRIC's rise doesn't threaten the dollar as global reserve currency simply exposes Mr. Drezner's spots.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

      Remove the free trade crap, let inflation run its course and then look
      where is China and the BRIC. All aces aren't shown.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

        People don't remember that when Great Britain defeated China in the opium wars, China was still the largest economy in the world, yet, China was doomed by then.


        Remove the free trade crap, let inflation run its course and then look
        where is China and the BRIC. All aces aren't shown.
        This might have worked 5 years ago, but is too late by now. The EU has replaced the US as China's trading partner, China can well don't export to the US at all. But where will the US make its goods then?

        Bear in mind that a large majority of products sold by US companies are made by Chinese contract manufacturers. American companies only stick their branding on ready made and even ready designed products.

        If China wants, China can even impose export punitive taxes on goods made for US companies, making US goods uncompetitive as compared to their European counterparts.

        And we're not even talking about treasuries.

        http://news.xinhuanet.com/english201...c_13677820.htm

        Chinese vice premier calls for deeper China-EU cooperation


        English.news.cn 2011-01-05 17:01:37


        MADRID, Jan. 5 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang said here Wednesday that China and the European Union should deepen their cooperation and strengthen their comprehensive strategic partnership.
        Both China and the EU are important players on the world stage and builders of the international structure, Li told a group of Chinese and Spanish businesspersons at a breakfast meeting.
        The two sides are at different phases of development, their economies are extensively complementary, and their interests are closely interwoven both at bilateral and global levels, he noted, stressing that a stronger China-EU relationship serves the interests of both sides.
        In such a favorable context, Li said, China and the 27-member bloc should stick to the spirit of practical cooperation and further deepen and broaden their comprehensive strategic partnership.


        Zooming in on economic cooperation and trade, the vice premier noted that China is the EU's second largest trading partner and export market and that China's imports from the EU rebounded rapidly in 2010.


        For its part, Beijing will unswervingly pursue wider opening-up, promote intellectual property protection and improve its investment environment, Li said.
        Meanwhile, he added, China hopes that the EU will recognize his country's full market economy status as soon as possible.
        Li also said he hopes the EU will relax its export limitations on China over high-tech products, resist protectionism and handle bilateral disputes via dialogue, thus building a better environment for the two sides to reinforce their cooperation.


        On issues of bilateral and global significance, China and the EU should strengthen their communication and coordination and champion multilateralism and global governance reform, Li said.


        With China being the world's largest developing country and the EU as a whole being the world's largest developed economy, both sides advocate pluralism of world civilizations, uphold free trade, promote South-North cooperation, oppose terrorism and commit themselves to defending world peace and stability and boosting global development, he said.


        The two sides, Li said, should understand and respect the development paths they each have chosen based on their respective realities, carry out exchanges and cooperation with the spirit of tolerance and play a more active role in world affairs.


        China is ready to beef up communications and coordination with the EU on bilateral and multilateral platforms and make concerted efforts with the European bloc to counter global challenges such as climate change, energy security and major natural disasters, Li said.
        Additionally, the vice premier said that Beijing steadfastly backs European integration and supports the EU in playing a bigger role in international affairs.
        "I am confident that as long as we have full confidence, treat each other with honesty and make efforts in concert, we will surely be able to grasp favorable opportunities, overcome various challenges and achieve common prosperity of China, Spain and Europe," Li said.

        Last edited by touchring; January 05, 2011, 11:36 AM.

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        • #5
          Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

          I don't see the EU replacing the US - I see China expanding its presence due to its role as aggregator of low cost products (not necessarily low tech).

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

            I think there is a sense of individuality in the US that produce a relatively high level of the type of Steve Jobs persons that will keep the US ahead for a long time. This sense of being someone unique and not drowning in the masses is so different in the US relative to other places.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: …and China Isn't Beating the U.S.

              Originally posted by c1ue View Post
              I don't see the EU replacing the US - I see China expanding its presence due to its role as aggregator of low cost products (not necessarily low tech).

              this might be true, if the EURO collapses.

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