Friday, March 20, 2009

More China Based Boggle

The Economist had an interesting article last week on protectionism in Asia, with a focus on China. Now China has been beating the anti-protectionist drum pretty hard since the financial crisis has started to bite, and for that I applaud them. Now it seems that what is good globally, is not so good locally; provincial barriers to trade are being erected at a rapid pace. This again goes back to China pointing the finger at America while they are digging the hole deeper for themselves. Decline is all relative, and the more China imposes their own decline on themselves, the more time they are giving to the West in general and America in particular.

As each province erects trade barriers, they provide protection for their own local firms. Job are protected, and the party official doesn’t have to worry about being lynched in the street. I can appreciate that appeal! Still, it works well for the West. The most competitive national firms are handicapped by trade restrictions, and are unable to benefit from the economies of scale they could reap otherwise. Investment will flow to inefficient firms, and crowd out that which could flow to the best ones. Inefficient firms will build up debts and bring on workers which they will not be able to sustain against real competition from other domestic producers.

When the current situation is resolved, hard questions will have to be asked. Do you lower the “temporary” barriers in order to encourage efficiency, or are you stuck with the inefficient firms because they owe your local banks money and employ large amounts of people who will be very angry if they are laid off? Solving one problem is setting the stage for another one, especially if demand does not pick up from the developed world when recovery begins. Instead of using the crisis to weed out the most inefficient producers, more time is being bought by low input prices and protectionism. If they US and EU can hold back the worst of their protectionist instincts, they will come out far better from this crisis than the Chinese.

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