This is true. @
LeveragedBuyout what do you think?
Edison, I broadly agree, but let me explain a bit. I believe the Chinese government is already aware of these tensions, but it is as of yet unclear what, if anything, will be done to correct the imbalance. I hope China doesn't overplay its hand by ignoring the issue until it is forced to. I thought China was starting to move in the right direction until these anti-monopoly moves against Qualcomm and Microsoft came up, which are tremendously aggravating the situation. Americans are driven by a strong sense of fair play--we don't need to be guaranteed a win, but we need to be guaranteed a level playing field, and right now, we don't have one.
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It's a complicated situation. The basic relationship works because the US focuses on high-value activities (specialized high end manufacturing and R&D, software, biotech, etc.), and China focuses on lower-value activities like manufacturing. The US puts such emphasis on IP rights because besides the unethical nature of stealing, IP is our competitive advantage. Here is an abstract from a 2012 US Trade Representative report:
"Intellectual Property and the U.S. Economy: Industries in Focus" | Office of the United States Trade Representative
"The findings of this report underscore a key point included in the President’s Trade Agenda: “promoting [a] trade policy that keeps pace with 21st century innovation can support the growth of well-paying IP trade-related job in the United States.” Specifically, the report found that intellectual property is critical to our balance of trade, since
goods from the IP-intensive industries account for 60% of all US merchandise exports, and 19% of our services exports. The study also shows that intellectual property is a key driver of our economy:
IP-intensive industries create 27.1 million jobs and indirectly support another 12.9 million jobs. All told, nearly 30 percent of all U.S. jobs are directly or indirectly attributable to the IP-intensive industries. And these are jobs that pay well. The average weekly wage in the IP-intensive industries overall is 42% higher by 2010 and its 73% for patent industry jobs and 77% for copyright industry jobs."
In short, intellectual property protection supports one of the key pillars of our economy, so it's easy to see why the US is so agitated about intellectual property rights (or in this case, China's relative lack of enforcement of IP rights).
The trade relationship today is what I will call a new iron hexagon between US multinational corporations, American consumers, Chinese manufacturers, Chinese workers, the Chinese government, and the US government:
-US MNCs outsource production to China, but keep high value-added activity like R&D, which means they own the vast majority of the value produced in the value chain
-This means that US workers lose out, but US investors win, as profit margins are near all-time highs, and earnings growth has remained impressive even as revenue growth has faltered (i.e. US companies replace high cost American workers with low cost Asian workers, or automation)
-American citizens win, as prices are driven down to compensate for the lower wages, and polluting manufacturing activity is moved overseas
-Chinese manufacturers are assured of high factory utilization due to Western demand
-Chinese workers are assured of high labor demand, and thus gradually rising wages
-The Chinese government enjoys impressive fiscal and trade surpluses, which enable easy investment in infrastructure, and less concern about welfare and pensions as living standards continually rise; this also means less civil discontent
-The US government benefits as China is forced to invest in US Treasuries to keep the RMB at an artificially low value, and thus US interest rates are kept low, interest payments on the debt are kept low, and a sovereign debt crisis is kept at bay
Who loses?
-US citizens, who are too expensive and have too many labor protections
-US domestic manufacturers, who are not competitive
-Chinese citizens, as their purchasing power is artificially suppressed, and they suffer under financial repression (they do not get enough interest on their deposits to compensate for inflation, and thus must invest in risky trust products)
-Chinese citizens, who must now deal with all of the heavily polluting industry that has been concentrated in China
It's pretty clear that there are winners and losers on both sides (and sometimes, the same party both wins and loses, as in the case of American and Chinese consumers/workers), but the balance of benefits goes to China.
Summary
This is only viable as long as China "follows the rules" and respects intellectual property. America needs a "win" from this relationship, and right now that "win" comes from US ownership of intellectual property at the high end of the value chain. The US is good at R&D and design, and also very good at finance. US companies are not allowed to freely compete in the financial industries in China, so that leaves only R&D as a competitive advantage for the US in this relationship.
Remember, Chinese companies don't have anything like the restrictions on operations in the US that US companies have in China.
The iron hexagon breaks down when Chinese companies pirate intellectual property and set up cheap competition, or the Chinese government uses anti-monopoly laws as a form of protectionism for its domestic industry to get around IP rights. In such cases, China has the entire value chain under its control, and the US is relegated to pure importer in a one-way relationship (US spends money developing, China reaps all the profit). Now, how does the relationship look? Not so good for the US. In fact, it becomes relatively unclear how the US benefits from trade with China at that point, and it's not hard to see that calls for protectionism or retaliation would soon follow (see: the US and Japan in the 1980s). This is where we are now, and why tensions are rising.
The US has outsourced its manufacturing to China in the understanding that the cost to our labor force would be compensated for by the profits to our IP holders.
Everyone steals IP at the developing stage, and the more advanced countries tolerate it through gritted teeth as one of the costs of doing business. But there comes a point where such violations are no longer tolerated, and it's up to the offender to reform before a trade war breaks out. Why would the US import from foreign companies that are stealing from its own companies? In addition, there will come a point where the R&D originators get tired of the knock-offs and pull their production from China, since it no longer makes sense to have such IP leaks from a cost-benefit analysis.
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That was a long-winded overview, now I'll answer your question directly. If China strictly enforces intellectual property rights, then the iron hexagon is preserved, the system continues to work, and tension will dissipate. China benefits from the current trade system, so
it's in China's interests to ensure that intellectual property rights are enforced; not simply for the benefit of the US, but also for the benefit of China's own burgeoning and globally-oriented MNCs, which would not be able to survive abroad against well-established competitors if those competitors were given free license to pirate Chinese IP in retaliation for China's violations, especially now that China's labor costs advantage is rapidly disappearing.
I'm optimistic that China will make the transition, and the Shanghai special economic zone is a very encouraging sign. But as we've discussed in other threads, China doesn't have unlimited time to do this. Xi's time in office is the right window to see this reform through, but if it doesn't happen, other developments like the TPP may force an economic realignment to China's detriment.