10 Quick Facts on US Trade

Trade offers many benefits for economies, and the outlook for the United States is not as grim as some political leaders suggest. Still, there are challenges for the US-Chinese trade relationship, explains Farok J. Contractor, professor at Rutgers Business School. The United States does have a hefty trade deficit with China in goods, but is also the world’s leading exporter in services and enjoys a surplus in services with China. US companies are innovative and entrepreneurial, recognizing they must guard their technology secrets in any trade relationship. The United States has operated with deficits against the rest of the world for decades because the country resists curtailing spending or increasing saving. Such patterns contribute to ballooning government debt, about half of which is held by foreign investors. Contractor warns the US pattern of deficit spending can continue only as long as three conditions hold: foreign and domestic Investors continue viewing the US dollar as a safe haven, foreign workers keep working for low wages, and the United States continues to create jobs. – YaleGlobal

10 Quick Facts on US Trade

The US wins big with trade, but deficit spending relies on faith in US dollar and low wages for foreign workers
Farok J. Contractor
Thursday, May 10, 2018

container ships at port and crowd waiting for Apple store in Beijing to open
China balance: Chinese exports in good to the US surge – and so do American technology and service exports to China

NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY: Acting on his campaign rhetoric that China is “raping our country,” US President Donald Trump announced tariffs on steel, aluminum and other products, threatening a “trade war.” Ten facts about the trade relationship highlight the challenges confronting both nations.

1 The US has a $337 billion deficit with China. This deficit worsens with every year. The deficit is worse for goods alone, since the US enjoys a surplus in services.

2 The US applies a 1.6 percent weighted mean tariff on imported products. This partly explains why the US is by far the world’s biggest importing nation. Most advanced countries have average tariffs below 5 percent, according to the World Bank. Tariffs alone, especially when so low, may not explain fundamental imbalances in trade.

Weighted mean tariffs in large economies vary from 1.4 to 8 percent
Trade landscape: Advanced economies typically have low tariff rates trending downward; averages can mask variations from zero to 100+ percent, and quotas and regulatory barriers present bigger obstacles  (Source: World Bank).

3 The US has run deficits against the rest of the world for decades. That US deficit with the world is $566 billion: In goods, that growing deficit is $796 billion, although in services, the US posts a surplus, also growing, of $230 billion. Chinese-made imports amount to $524 billion out of $2,895 billion imported from all countries, or 18 percent of total US imports.

4 The US runs a surplus with few countries. Most are small nations. The total of the top 15 nations that run deficits with the United States – including the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Guatemala – is just over $148 billion.

5 The US is the world’s leading exporter of services. The US exports more services than it imports from the rest of the world, a $230 billion surplus. The US is a powerhouse of innovation with an entrepreneurial startup culture. So from a comparative-advantage perspective, it makes sense that routine products like appliances and tools are made in low-wage nations while the US focuses on innovation. Moreover, trade statistics do not fully capture the US advantage in services. Apple pays its subcontractor in China, Foxconn, about $10 for product assembly, with parts shipped from multiple nations. Foxconn ships the assembled iPhone to the United States at an invoice value around $220 –$210 for imported parts, $10 for assembly. This is recorded as a US import from China although only $10 of trade value was added there. The iPhone’s $649 retail value minus $220 equaling Apple’s $429 gross margin appears nowhere in trade data. The Chinese value-added $10 component is worth $150 million – 4.5 percent of 15 million iPhones worth $3.3 billion. 

6 China has a principal role in the US merchandise deficit. Combining goods and services, China accounts for 59 percent of the US overall trade deficit: $337 billion for China compared with $566 for the world as a whole. Tens of millions of Chinese workers toil for less than $5 per hour on behalf of US consumers, making low-tech products, while a few million Americans in skilled jobs earn $35 or more per hour to develop aircraft and financial packages or produce soybeans and pork.

 top 15 nations that run surpluses in US trade
Making America great: The United States runs a trade surplus with some nations including the Netherlands, Great Britain and Guatemala; the total surplus for the top 15 is just over $148 billion (Source: US Census Bureau)

7 The rest of the world, including China, partially finances the US trade deficit. The Chinese do not need or use dollars in their country. Chinese firms turn them over to local banks in exchange for their own currency, and banks turn them over to their central bank. The central bank reinvests that surplus in US assets, mainly Treasury securities. This helps prop up the US government budget, keeping the US dollar strong and pleasing US consumers with affordable goods and low interest rates for mortgages and credit cards, while maintaining Chinese jobs. The US government, spending more than it takes in from domestic tax revenue, has run a deficit for most of the last 35 years, but still funds expenditures like defense – an accumulated $19 trillion in debt.

8 All policies create winners and losers, but in international trade, “winners” outnumber “losers.”   Trump won the presidency because of victories in a few key states where the earnings of disaffected workers in mature industries, like coal and steel, declined during the past decade because of global competition. Other US workers had flat earnings since the 2008 financial crisis. Inequality has increased. An ethic of hyper-competition has emerged, making it easy for government leaders to overlook the despair felt by bewildered millions and neglect safety nets and job training. Nevertheless, overall, most Americans are better off today than their parents in income, health, education and prospects. Unemployment is at a record low. Retirees and others enjoy record levels of benefits and health care. The average American enjoys the highest after-tax purchasing power in the world.

9 In almost all cases, companies accused of “dumping” are not losing money. Dumping is said to occur when unscrupulous importers sell products below cost and hurt competing local producers. The selling price of an imported item may be low, but almost always is above the variable cost of production and distribution, with additional over-installed capacity used to cover fixed costs in other markets. Most international marketers practice global price discrimination – pricing products at what each country’s market can bear— thus maximizing overall global revenue and profits.

Such dumping forces local producers to reduce prices, occasionally driving them to lay off workers and close their business. The Trump administration accuses Chinese steel and aluminum firms of dumping. China has excess capacity, more than its domestic market demands, aided by cheap loans and land from the Chinese government. The Chinese companies are probably not losing money. But so-called dumping also results in multibillion-dollar benefits to the United States and other countries with low-cost steel and aluminum for cars, machinery, and other products. Economy-wide benefits of international trade are diffused and hard to measure, whereas the losses are concentrated among a handful of companies and voting districts.

The US posts more than $19 trillion in debt, about half owed to foreign holders, in 2017

10 China is hungry for Western technology and company secrets. Chinese companies seek to benefit from learning rivals’ technology. History demonstrates that company secrets are not kept for long. In the 1780s, firms with Arkwright-designed spinning wheels and other equipment prompted the British government to pass draconian laws punishing anyone exporting textile machinery or designs to the United States, which still used manual methods. Committing designs to memory, hiding them on small scraps of paper, emigrants leaked the technology to America. By 1794, the United States became a strong textiles rival of England. Likewise, China kept secrets in silk production, enjoying a worldwide monopoly until 552 AD, when two monks smuggled silkworms in hollow walking sticks. Chinese tea was another monopoly until the 1860s, when a Scotsman noticed that a plant in India resembled the Chinese bush.

Companies trying to learn secrets is not new. But Chinese receive deliberate help from their government: First, Chinese regulations prevent some foreign firms from investing and doing business in China without taking on a local company as a partner – though China recently has reduced  such restrictions and Western companies, not naïve, shelter their deepest secrets. Second, the Chinese government makes no secret of its nationalist desire to help Chinese companies with cyberespionage, considering that 45 percent of Chinese industry consists of state-owned enterprises. The US may have superior capabilities, but US laws would generally frown upon government covertly helping US firms.

In sum, US trade deficits for the past four decades are a direct correlate of government deficits. The pattern can continue as long as three conditions hold: 

•Foreign and domestic Investors continue to have faith in the dollar as safe haven, investing in US Treasury bills and bonds.
•Foreign workers continue toil for wages at less than $5 per hour.
•US employment remains at tolerable levels.

The world has laboriously built an intricate trading system that results in interdependencies. Any adjustments will lead to a new set of winners and losers.

Farok J. Contractor is a professor in the Management and Global Business Department at Rutgers Business School. He has researched foreign direct investment for three decades and also taught at the Wharton School, Copenhagen Business School, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Nanyang Technological University, Indian Institute of Foreign Trade and other schools and conducted executive seminars in the US, Europe, Latin America and Asia. For further details, read his blog on Global Business Issues.

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