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TRADE WARS
Biden keeps pressure on China, aims spending at competitive edge
By Delphine TOUITOU
Washington (AFP) June 8, 2021

Australia PM presses G7 on trade reform to rein in China
Sydney (AFP) June 9, 2021 - G7 nations must overhaul global trade rules to stop powerful countries using economic coercion, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Wednesday ahead of a meeting of the group's leaders in Britain.

As Australia's shadow trade war with its largest trading partner China shows few signs of abating, Morrison told the Perth USAsia Centre that the global rules-based order is "under serious strain".

"The most practical way to address economic coercion is the restoration of the global trading body's binding dispute settlement system," he said.

"Where there are no consequences for coercive behaviour, there is little incentive for restraint."

Beijing has imposed harsh economic sanctions on a range of Australian products in recent months, including tariffs or disruption across several agricultural sectors, coal, wine and tourism.

Many in Canberra believe the measures are punishment for pushing back against Beijing's influence operations in Australia, rejecting Chinese investment in sensitive areas and publicly calling for an investigation into the origins of the coronavirus.

Morrison's comments came ahead of the G7 Summit in Cornwall, southern England, where Australia has been invited as a guest nation to participate in the "G7 Plus" talks.

He plans to use the event as an opportunity to work with leading nations to "modernise" the World Trade Organization rulebook, ahead of its ministerial conference in November.

Australia has launched WTO action over Chinese tariffs on barley imports, but the case could take years to resolve.

With climate change expected to rank high on the agenda at the G7's first in-person meeting for nearly two years, Morrison also appears set to resist international pressure to commit Australia to a target of becoming carbon-neutral by 2050.

Australia will focus on "how we succeed and prosper" in a global economy moving toward net-zero, without putting local jobs and industries at risk, he said Wednesday.

"It's about how Australia's best able to advance our interests as part of a world that is dealing with climate change."

Australia is one of the world's largest producers of coal and natural gas, but has also suffered extreme droughts, floods and bushfires in recent years that scientists say are being worsened by climate change.

US President Joe Biden's trade and industrial policy towards China is one of his few areas of agreement with predecessor Donald Trump.

After maintaining tariffs Trump imposed on Beijing and expanding a blacklist of Chinese firms, Biden is now pushing Congress to approve a plan to invest in research and development to maintain the United States' competitive edge.

Here are key aspects of the plan, which the Senate is expected to adopt Tuesday:

- What is at stake? -

As with Trump, Biden campaigned on bringing manufacturing jobs that had moved overseas back to the United States, particularly for strategic components like semiconductors and pharmaceutical supplies.

But Beijing appears to have already won the manufacturing battle, and with its "Made in China 2025" plan launched six years ago, intends to dominate the technologies of tomorrow.

The United States is therefore pursuing a more limited goal: defending the leadership of its top industrial and tech firms.

Both Democrats and Republicans are also concerned about the progress Beijing has made on 5G technology, the next generation of ultra-fast mobile internet, and that it could compromise US national security.

The technology will allow for even faster movement of data, and Washington fears China's investment could pose a risk to trade secrets and private information, or allow for malicious actors to disrupt the network.

Under Trump, the US officials worried that China could shut down its communications networks.

Those concerns have intensified in recent months after cyberattacks hit major US infrastructure, including a pipeline supplying fuel to the country's east coast.

- Blacklisting -

Trump cited the country's national security when he barred telecommunications firms from buying components from companies deemed risky -- an order aimed in particular at Chinese tech giant Huawei.

Last week, Biden expanded the list of companies Americans are banned from doing business with.

He also amended Trump's original executive order to include Chinese companies involved in surveillance technologies that could be used against dissidents in China, like its Muslim Uighur minority, and also around the world.

- Tariffs -

Under Trump, Washington levied hundreds of billions of dollars in punitive tariffs on goods imported from China.

Biden has not lifted them, and his trade representative Katherine Tai has made little secret of the fact that they're intended as a means of pressuring Beijing.

- Similarities with China -

China subsidizes its companies and invests massively in them.

The US plan, which must also be approved by the House of Representatives, takes a similar approach, providing for the promotion of American firms and production with an eye towards boosting local employment.

A total of $52 billion is to be invested over five years to encourage the manufacturing of semiconductors in the United States, as well as for research and development into the technology.

Another $1.5 billion will go towards the development of 5G technology.

- What the future holds -

Under Trump, relations between Washington and Beijing grew markedly worse, but the two economies still remain deeply interconnected.

However, the combination of the trade war and the Covid-19 pandemic has cut into their commerce. The next question is whether the world's two largest economies will begin to truly decouple.


Related Links
Global Trade News


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TRADE WARS
EU chief defends China deal ahead of US summit
Brussels (AFP) June 8, 2021
One of Brussels' top two leaders has defended the European Union's efforts to reach an investment agreement with China, ahead of summit meetings with US President Joe Biden. The president of the European Council, Charles Michel, will meet Biden at this weekend's G7 summit in Cornwall, before hosting him in Brussels next week for EU-US talks. Speaking to reporters ahead of the series of summits, Michel stressed that Biden's efforts to mend ties mark a return to a "strong partnership" after tensio ... read more

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