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Fear Not China
by
Sheldon Richman,
June 8, 2005
China. Why has that word for so long struck fear in the
hearts of Americans? During the Cold War people harbored
terrible fantasies about hordes of Chinese swarming over
them and imposing a virulent Oriental communism. Now the
Cold War is over, and although China still has a
communist-inspired authoritarian government, this is not
your fathers Red nemesis. Much has changed in the
worlds most populous country.
Yet we remain in fear. But now it is an economic fear:
China will buy up all the beef. China will buy up all the
wheat. China will make all the textiles and clothing and
take our jobs. Chinas trade surplus with the United
States will put us hopelessly in debt.
Nonsense. Its about time we kept our heads and
applied some basic economics to whats going on.
Economically, the Chinese are freer than they used to be.
Chinese entrepreneurs can raise capital, and foreigners
can invest their money, to create productive enterprises.
Chinese workers have far more choices than they used to
have. The result has been stunning economic growth and an
export boom fueled by low-priced high-quality products
Predictably, this worries some people, specifically,
Americans and other nationals who make what the Chinese
are now selling so successfully. This isnt worrying
American consumers, who find that, because their dollars
stretch further, they have more to invest or spend on
additional things.
But some people just cant take good news. They have
to look for the gray lining in every silver cloud. The
success of the Chinese sellers and their American
customers, were told, is really not good news. Why
not? Because Americans are losing their jobs. Because the
Chinese arent buying enough American goods and the
resulting trade deficit puts us more and more in their
debt. Because the Chinese government is artificially
holding down the value of its currency in order to make
exports more attractive (as if politicians know what the
exchange rate should be). Because ... because ...
because. But the what about the great deals at the
stores? Their Marxist (Groucho, that is) response, in
essence, is: who are you going to believe, me or your
eyes?
I say believe your eyes. None of the objections is valid.
A highly advanced economy always is and always
should be losing some jobs. They are replaced by
technology in some cases, by cheaper lower-skilled
foreign labor in others. This is progress, because new
and higher-paying jobs take their place. In 1905 lots
more people were growing food than are today. Were we
better off then? The Chinese inroads into the American
market have made things more difficult for workers in
Bangladesh than for workers here. We demanding consumers
deserted other third-world producers as soon as we saw
what the Chinese were willing to provide.
Lets hear no more trade-deficit-equals-debt
buncombe. First, there is no reason to expect bilateral
merchandise accounts to balance. None. Second, that
deficit is perfectly offset by the capital-account
surplus with China: what they dont spend here they
invest here. Period. Anyone who is concerned about
Chinas being a creditor should direct his wrath at
the U.S. government. Its the one engaging in
deficit spending and selling Treasury bills to the
Chinese. If none were sold, none could be bought.
The new anti-Chinese hysteria makes less sense than the
old did. When will we get it through our heads that it is
good for others to get rich? It makes us even richer.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Send him email.
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