1 / 28

Current and Future Trade Issues and Policies

Current and Future Trade Issues and Policies. Robert B. Cassidy Senior Advisor International Trade and Services. Introduction. “May You Live in Interesting Times” Doha Round FTAs Elephant in the Room Legislative Prognosis: Trade Promotion Authority (Fast Track) China. Doha Round.

zedekiah
Download Presentation

Current and Future Trade Issues and Policies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Current and Future Trade Issues and Policies Robert B. Cassidy Senior Advisor International Trade and Services

  2. Introduction • “May You Live in Interesting Times” • Doha Round • FTAs • Elephant in the Room • Legislative Prognosis: • Trade Promotion Authority (Fast Track) • China

  3. DohaRound • Launched in November 2001, after failure to launch in Seattle in 1999. • Comprehensive: 21 issues for negotiations and discussions. Key topics: • Agriculture • Market access in industrial products • Implementation of past obligations • Services • Trade laws, IPR, capacity building • Infamous four “Singapore” issues: Investment, environment, competition policy, and trade facilitation

  4. Missed Deadlines -- Cancun • Failure at Cancun – July 2003: • Four “Singapore Issues” • Developing countries opposed competition policy, environment and investment, and trade facilitation • Agriculture: No movement on “Modalities” • Not enough movement by the EU, US, and other rich nations • U.S. cotton subsidies • Industrial tariffs: Developing countries unwilling to make concessions unless significant liberalization in agricultural subsidies and market access • Developing countries now play a major role in the negotiations

  5. Missed Deadlines: Hong Kong, 2005 • Ministers avoided making any commitments until others moved. • EU refused to improve its offer on Agricultural domestic subsidies and market access unless better market access offers in industrial products • U.S. prepared to improve its offer if EU and others were prepared to do the same • U.S. and developing countries believed the EU offer was insufficient and thus did not improve their offers. • Ministers focused on process rather than substance, pushing deadlines into 2006. • Substance more difficult to resolve: All the tough issues

  6. July Ministerial Fails • July Geneva Ministerial failed to set firm modalities (formulas) for negotiating country-specific concessions • US puts improved offer on the table • EU does not come forward with improved offer • Developing countries do not improve agricultural market access offer (important to US) or industrial market access offers (important to EU and US) • India, Brazil and China did not improve offers • China actually arguing for developing countries to match their WTO accession rates

  7. Time Running Out • Most concede that negotiations are over for the time being. • Trade promotion authority runs out in July 2007. • Not likely to complete negotiations by that timeframe. • USTR Schwab has been meeting with leaders in Asia and Latin America to determine whether negotiations can go forward • A mid-term election in November with likelihood that Democrats will win more seats in House and Senate. • Will the Administration seek to renew Trade Promotion Authority? • Likely to be a trade bill at least to pass Permanent Normal Trade Relations status for Vietnam • Doha Round Failure still leaves FTA negotiations

  8. Concluded: NAFTA Israel Jordan Singapore Chile Australia Morocco Central American FTA including the Dominican Republic Bahrain Oman Under Negotiations Thailand South African Customs Union Andean Countries: Colombia, Peru and Ecuador Malaysia South Korea Panama Over 2/3rds of U.S. exports Over 50% of U.S. imports Ambitious Bilateral FTA Program

  9. Regional FTA Negotiations • The broad regional FTAs have faltered as bilateral negotiations expanded: • The Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA) is stalled over Brazil refusal to negotiate an FTA that doesn’t cover agricultural subsidies • U.S. opposes because EU is the major offender • Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) negotiations have stalled over unwillingness to move forward to Free Trade. • ASEAN initiative and Middle East initiative focus on bilateral FTAs in the region

  10. Waning Support for Trade • CAFTA passed by 2 votes in the House • Only passed after Ways and Means Chairman Thomas passed a bill on China, a step he had said he would never take. • Peru and Colombia FTA legislation will be introduced after the mid-term election. Not clear about the outcome • Vietnam Permanent Normal Trade legislation will be introduced, probably before the President visits Vietnam for the APEC meetings in November • Doha failure represent a lack of support for trade liberalization in EU, developing countries and even the United States.

  11. Elephant in the Room: China • Every country is focused on how to compete with China • Latin America, including Mexico, is loosing markets in the U.S. to China • ASEAN members are concerned about the loss of investment to China • China is importing more from Asia and assembling products for export to the United States • Canada is loosing manufacturing exports in central Canada to the US; commodity exports to China is the balance • EU countries along the southern rim face severe competition from China • U.S. manufacturing has still not replace 2 million jobs lost

  12. What is Driving China’s Trade • Theories: • WTO accession? • China’s cheap Labor • Undervalued Currency • Out-sourcing – foreign direct investment • Closed Internal market that fuels exports

  13. WTO Accession • WTO accession reduced Chinese tariffs and other Chinese barriers • Trading partners made no concessions since they were already applying their most favored nations treatment to China • China’s reduction of trade barriers did reduce costs since the duties on inputs were reduced. • A benefit but probably not large enough to account for the major increases in China’s exports

  14. Cheap Labor • China’s wage rates have been rising and in some regions, labor, especially skilled labor, is in short supply. • Guangdong has higher wage rates, as does Beijing. • Chinese and foreign companies frequently have to hire more workers than necessary. • Other countries probably have lower wage rates now for the manufacturing sector. Vietnam the new target • Probably not the major reason for the expansion of China’s exports

  15. Undervalued CurrencyEv • Everyone agrees: China’s currency is undervalued. • Undervaluation problem began in 1994 when China depreciated the yuan by 50%: Asian Financial Crisis • U.S. recession and WTO accession exacerbated the disparity • CCC: Section 301 petition based on violation of a trade agreement: WTO Subsidies Agreement and IMF • Mandatory retaliation • WTO Dispute Settlement • Dems in Congress file their own 301 • Dispute: The degree of undervaluation depends on the trade data

  16. Chinese Trade Data Incorrect

  17. Chinese Trade Data Incorrect

  18. Effects of Undervalued Yuan • Chinese exports subsidized; imports taxed • Investment is cheap • Foreign exchange (F/X) increases • Money supply increases • Inflation increases • Free floating currencies bear the burden of adjustment: euro, Pound, C$

  19. Enormous Increase in FDI

  20. Foreign Direct Investment Flows to China

  21. Is the Yuan Properly Valued? • Consensus that the Yuan is undervalued • International Organizations (IMF) • Administration Statements (Bush, Snow, Paulson, others) • Scholarly Research: including CRS • Only Dispute: Degree of undervaluation • 10%-75%, depending on data on exports/imports • Treasury and IMF: use Chinese data • CCC, others use trading partner data: reverse engineering

  22. Estimates of Undervaluation

  23. What Do We Do • Three approaches: • Jawboning: Treasury approach up to now • Yuan appreciates by 2.1% in July and further 1.2% since then • IMF Pressure: IMF sets up medium-term review of global imbalances • All countries’ measures put on the table • Domestic Legislation

  24. Closed Internal Markets • What is the one issue I wish I could renegotiate: • Open China to China • 15-18% to distribute products within China • 4% in OECD • Keeps China’s economy an export driven economy

  25. Legislative Agenda • Mid-term elections present uncertainties: • Trade issues not likely to be at center of election debates • Unclear whether democrats will be able to take control of house and/or senate • Even if Dems win either or both houses, not necessarily true that trade legislation is dead. Rangel is pro-trade but also support labor and environment issues in trade agreements • Likely to be a lame duck session. Trade legislation likely to be introduced but unclear what it will include. • Renewal of Generalized system of preferences • Miscellaneous tariff bill • Peru/Columbia? TPA authority?

  26. China Legislation • Senators Schumer and Graham requested that China currency bill be taken up for a vote before adjournment • Promised a vote • Probably to help Secretary Paulson • Senator Grassley has currency bill: Doesn’t do much. • Senators Collins and other may introduce legislation allowing CVD investigations against undervalued currency • Prognosis: Passing legislation in one house is not sufficient. Allows elected officials to say they did something.

More Related