What's new

RCEP solidifies China as center of Asia’s trade

onebyone

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 2, 2014
Messages
7,550
Reaction score
-6
Country
Thailand
Location
Thailand
RCEP solidifies China as center of Asia’s trade
China’s Asia imports nearly tripled in the past five years, building a Sinocentric economic zone the new trade deal will consolidate
By DAVID P. GOLDMANJANUARY 5, 2022
1641352593053.png

The newly enacted RCEP regional trade deal will facilitate more intra-Asian trade. Image: Twitter
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), described as “a coup for China” by France 24, ratifies a grand realignment of Asian economies around China’s import market.
Exports to China from the rest of Asia rose by 260% between 2016 and 2021, the biggest margin of trade expansion in any major market. Asia’s recovery from the pandemic recession and its prospects for future growth depend increasingly on China.
China’s willingness and capacity to absorb imports from other Asian countries presented its Asian neighbors with an offer they couldn’t refuse. Import tariffs within the 15-nation trading bloc will fall by 90% over time under the RCEP, giving the other Asian economies more access to China’s market.

By opening its economy to the rest of Asia, China made the deal attractive to countries such as Australia whose trade and diplomatic relations with Beijing have been tense since 2020.

Among the 15 members, China was the first to ratify RCEP, as Chinese President Xi Jinping noted in a November 5 speech. Xi also said that China would do its utmost to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), originally launched by the US as an anti-China trade club.

President Donald Trump took the US out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017, and the Biden administration has indicated no interest in reversing the decision.
1641352625199.png


China has emerged as the center of gravity in a triangular relationship with the United States and Europe on one side, and the rest of Asia on the other.

Chinese exports to the industrial world surged in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, as China met the demand generated by government stimulus programs in the West. Asia provided parts and raw materials for China’s export industry.


Some American political leaders viewed the inauguration of RCEP with dismay. Fifteen Republican members of the Senate Finance Committee signed a November 8 letter urging the White House to “begin digital trade negotiations with our allies and partners in Asia.”

“China is quickly seizing the initiative for trade policy in the East—to the detriment of United States interests. Fifteen countries—comprising 30 percent of global Gross Domestic Product—have signed on to a trade deal that China backs: the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), an agreement that comports with China’s interests, including weak rules on intellectual property rights, and none whatsoever on state-owned enterprises,” they wrote.

“Meanwhile, while the United States continues to disparage the Comprehensive and Progressive Transpacific Partnership (CP-TPP), the agreement that it helped negotiate, China now wants to join it. That China could someday become an outsized member of both major trade blocs in Asia while the United States is party to neither, is a strategically unfavorable position to be in for the United States. If this challenge is left unanswered, China will continue to make headway in its strategy to build a China-centric economic order and displace the United States from its pre-eminent position in international affairs,” the letter said.

There is little chance that the Biden administration will return to Asian trade diplomacy, however. Trump made trade a toxic issue, and the Democrats do not want to expose a flank ahead of the 2022 Congressional elections.

China’s enormous internal market, meanwhile, has become a magnet for the rest of Asia. In the past, China has used non-tariff barriers to protect its domestic industries from foreign competition, a source of recurring complaints from Washington.


“Significant barriers for US companies” selling to China “still exist,” the US Special Trade Representative (USTR) wrote in February 2021. “The US government has demanded that the Chinese government address these barriers and vigorously enforced US and international trade laws and obligations,” the USTR said.

But China has opened the floodgates for Asian imports. The aggregate numbers are inflated somewhat by the past year’s rise in raw materials prices, but the most impressive gain in China’s imports came from Taiwan, which sells electronics to Chin

1641352662830.png


Taiwan’s exports to China more than doubled since 2016, with most of the growth occurring over the past two years. Part of China’s purchases from Taiwan include components that China assembles into electronics goods for the US and European markets, and part reflects China’s increasing demand for semiconductors.


1641352679141.png


China has also outsourced some of its more labor-intensive industries to Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. China’s industrial integration with the rest of Asia is balanced by a jump in exports to Europe and the United States.

Germany, once the world’s top industrial exporter, has become the fastest-growing customer for Chinese goods. At US$11 billion a month, Germany’s imports from China have nearly doubled from pre-pandemic levels. To a great extent, this reflects the shift in German firms’ production facilities to China.

1641352697266.png


Germans are still buying the products of German companies, but they are produced in China. With a declining workforce and limited access to the skilled European immigrants who sustained the German economy during the past decade, Germany is transferring productive capacity to China.

Follow David P. Goldman on Twitter at @davidpgoldman

 
. .
I think Southeast Asia will become a new center of Asia. Ten years ago, the economy of Southeast Asia was only half that of India. Now it has surpassed India.

How was it the half of India ten years ago?
 
.
RCEP solidifies China as center of Asia’s trade
China’s Asia imports nearly tripled in the past five years, building a Sinocentric economic zone the new trade deal will consolidate
By DAVID P. GOLDMANJANUARY 5, 2022
View attachment 805992
The newly enacted RCEP regional trade deal will facilitate more intra-Asian trade. Image: Twitter
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), described as “a coup for China” by France 24, ratifies a grand realignment of Asian economies around China’s import market.
Exports to China from the rest of Asia rose by 260% between 2016 and 2021, the biggest margin of trade expansion in any major market. Asia’s recovery from the pandemic recession and its prospects for future growth depend increasingly on China.
China’s willingness and capacity to absorb imports from other Asian countries presented its Asian neighbors with an offer they couldn’t refuse. Import tariffs within the 15-nation trading bloc will fall by 90% over time under the RCEP, giving the other Asian economies more access to China’s market.

By opening its economy to the rest of Asia, China made the deal attractive to countries such as Australia whose trade and diplomatic relations with Beijing have been tense since 2020.

Among the 15 members, China was the first to ratify RCEP, as Chinese President Xi Jinping noted in a November 5 speech. Xi also said that China would do its utmost to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), originally launched by the US as an anti-China trade club.

President Donald Trump took the US out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017, and the Biden administration has indicated no interest in reversing the decision.
View attachment 805993

China has emerged as the center of gravity in a triangular relationship with the United States and Europe on one side, and the rest of Asia on the other.

Chinese exports to the industrial world surged in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, as China met the demand generated by government stimulus programs in the West. Asia provided parts and raw materials for China’s export industry.


Some American political leaders viewed the inauguration of RCEP with dismay. Fifteen Republican members of the Senate Finance Committee signed a November 8 letter urging the White House to “begin digital trade negotiations with our allies and partners in Asia.”

“China is quickly seizing the initiative for trade policy in the East—to the detriment of United States interests. Fifteen countries—comprising 30 percent of global Gross Domestic Product—have signed on to a trade deal that China backs: the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), an agreement that comports with China’s interests, including weak rules on intellectual property rights, and none whatsoever on state-owned enterprises,” they wrote.

“Meanwhile, while the United States continues to disparage the Comprehensive and Progressive Transpacific Partnership (CP-TPP), the agreement that it helped negotiate, China now wants to join it. That China could someday become an outsized member of both major trade blocs in Asia while the United States is party to neither, is a strategically unfavorable position to be in for the United States. If this challenge is left unanswered, China will continue to make headway in its strategy to build a China-centric economic order and displace the United States from its pre-eminent position in international affairs,” the letter said.

There is little chance that the Biden administration will return to Asian trade diplomacy, however. Trump made trade a toxic issue, and the Democrats do not want to expose a flank ahead of the 2022 Congressional elections.

China’s enormous internal market, meanwhile, has become a magnet for the rest of Asia. In the past, China has used non-tariff barriers to protect its domestic industries from foreign competition, a source of recurring complaints from Washington.


“Significant barriers for US companies” selling to China “still exist,” the US Special Trade Representative (USTR) wrote in February 2021. “The US government has demanded that the Chinese government address these barriers and vigorously enforced US and international trade laws and obligations,” the USTR said.

But China has opened the floodgates for Asian imports. The aggregate numbers are inflated somewhat by the past year’s rise in raw materials prices, but the most impressive gain in China’s imports came from Taiwan, which sells electronics to Chin

View attachment 805994

Taiwan’s exports to China more than doubled since 2016, with most of the growth occurring over the past two years. Part of China’s purchases from Taiwan include components that China assembles into electronics goods for the US and European markets, and part reflects China’s increasing demand for semiconductors.


View attachment 805995

China has also outsourced some of its more labor-intensive industries to Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. China’s industrial integration with the rest of Asia is balanced by a jump in exports to Europe and the United States.

Germany, once the world’s top industrial exporter, has become the fastest-growing customer for Chinese goods. At US$11 billion a month, Germany’s imports from China have nearly doubled from pre-pandemic levels. To a great extent, this reflects the shift in German firms’ production facilities to China.

View attachment 805996

Germans are still buying the products of German companies, but they are produced in China. With a declining workforce and limited access to the skilled European immigrants who sustained the German economy during the past decade, Germany is transferring productive capacity to China.

Follow David P. Goldman on Twitter at @davidpgoldman


Classic US regime. US elite lose sleep over China and run their brain at full capacity as to how to trip it down.

If those precious brain power were used to think of how to get one better to compete a rival, instead of how to slow a rival down to beat them, US politicians would have actually served the public.

RCEP will enable China what Japan (due to fascist tendencies) failed in the past: A prosperous East Asia. AU and NZ are side stories. India, thanks Buddha, is busy with the upcoming India 2020 plan. The central players are China and the ASEAN.
 
.
Trump’s withdrawal from Tpp is one of biggest blunders ever.
What a stupid decision
Now complaining chinese eat their lunch doesn’t help anything.
 
.
... Chinese exports to the industrial world surged in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, as China met the demand generated by government stimulus programs in the West. Asia provided parts and raw materials for China’s export industry. ...
I remember on this very forum how the Indian Hindu fanatics and the Vietnamese nationalists jumped up and down like monkies claiming West will punish China for the pandemic and how India and Vietnam will now replace China.

I guess they just didn't realise Chinese resolve to get back on its feet much faster after the initial lock down neither India and Vietnam understood the amount of demand the West had after stimulus packages were applied to Western economies.

As far as the world stands right now, there's no alternative to China as being the epicentre of world trade, it's not going change and the world should be happy for it.
 
Last edited:
.
I remember on this very forum how the Indian Hindu fanatics and the Vietnamese nationalists jumped up and down like monkies claiming West will punish China for the pandemic and how India and Vietnam will now replace China.

I guess they just didn't realise Chinese resolves to get back on its feet much faster after the initial lock down neither India and Vietnam understood the amount of demand the West had after stimulus packages were applied to Western economies.

As far as the world stands right now, there's no alternative to China as being the epicentre of world trade, it's not going change and the world should be happy for it.
The long missing viva viet said that China is going to collapse in 2023.
 
.
Meanwhile AMerica got 1million covid cases in a day and whites are becoming minorities in their country lol
 
.
Trump’s withdrawal from Tpp is one of biggest blunders ever.
What a stupid decision
Now complaining chinese eat their lunch doesn’t help anything.

Trump was smart to withdraw from TPP. India was smart to withdraw from RCEP.

Two high IQ regimes.

China is in the center of the RCEP. Soon to be in CPTPP.

All roads lead to Beijing.
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom