Q&A
with India Today (Ananth Krishnan), January 28-29, 2017
Q1: Are we heading to a China-US trade war? If
Trump goes ahead with 45% (or high) tariffs on Chinese imports, do you think he
is in a position to do a lot of damage to the still struggling Chinese
economy?
A1: A selective import tariff on US Imports from China and an
equivalent tariff on Chinese imports from US would do much more damage to the
Chinese economy than to US economy, because of the asymmetry in current account
balance & the ease with which imports can be substituted compared to
exports. Such a move would accelerate the crash landing of the Chinese economy.
My guess still is that US will find other ways to address China's non-market
that don't undermine WTO system.
Q2: Do you think withdrawing from the
TPP is really as big a gift to China as many analyses are suggesting? What do
you think India's response should be? And what would an increasingly inward
looking US (at least on trade) mean for us?
A2: The TPP has been highly over-rated by conventional wisdom
(CW) for both its real economic and its geopolitical benefits to members. There
is some psychological loss to the members and corresponding psychological gain
to China, but this is very minor compared to the general economic &
geopolitical uncertainty created by the sceptical approach of the new president
towards foreign relations/policy.
Q3: Do you think this is going to speed up the RCEP negotiations or on the other hand allow China to relax and drag its feet? On RCEP, India has been concerned about the services aspect. How do you think we should approach RCEP in this changed climate?
A3: The direct effect would tend to be to speed up RCEP
negotiations. On the other hand the greater uncertainty separately created with
respect to US-China economic relations,would tend to induce a wait & watch
attitude. Net effect is unclear.
Q4: The Chinese have been pushing an
FTAAP at the last few APEC Summits (seen by some as a TPP counter). Given
China's mercantilism (and the imbalance it enjoys with most countries in the
region) do you see this going forward at all?
A4: Given its mercantilist approach, and its slowing economy,
there is little indication that China is willing either to change its economic
development model towards genuine openness or make sacrifices for other
countries. This constraint to FTAAP remains unchanged.
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