In a major shift, the International Monetary Fund is now calling for a coordinated response to global trade imbalances. Translation: China’s persistent trade surpluses are a global problem.
In April, Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the IMF, said the following:
“Not all [trade] imbalances are born equal. … We have excessive imbalances. And it is excessive imbalances that we are concerned about.”
She added: “And I think it is very appropriate that we analyze where [trade imbalances are] coming from … and then work towards, preferably, a cooperative, collaborative solution.”
Georgieva’s call for a cooperative solution is the perfect opportunity for smaller economies to act. This is the moment for Prime Minister Mark Carney to implement his much-touted vision for middle powers to unite against global hegemons.
As Canadian Affairs has reported in recent weeks, the global trade system is in a state of disruption — and not just due to the United States.
For decades, and in recent years in particular, China has aggressively pursued what a recent research report referred to as an “industrial policy of everything.”
Michael Pettis, a leading expert on China’s economy, argues the “arithmetic of comparative advantage” only works as a two-way street: that is, where countries sell what they make best and buy what others make better.
China, he says, is doing something different. It is a “net exporter across the board — i.e. run[ing] large, persistent trade surpluses.”
Economists have a name for this: mercantilism, a zero-sum strategy once popular with colonial powers.
This “non-functional” system has worked for decades because the U.S., U.K. and Canada absorbed about 70 per cent of the global imbalances, Pettis says. The tradeoff was the deindustrialization of their own economies.
But under both Trump administrations, and the intervening Biden administration, the U.S. made half-hearted efforts to correct course.
The problem is its implementation has been deeply flawed. Instead of pursuing a coordinated response with other net importing economies, the U.S. has abdicated its leadership role and tariffed China on its own (while simultaneously slapping tariffs on friends alike.) It also quickly lowered its 145-per-cent tariffs on China after the country threatened to withhold its critical minerals.
But even if America’s high unilateral tariffs had stayed in place, this would not have solved the problem. China would simply shift its surplus exports to other parts of the world.
“If the US decides to opt out of this system (and so far, for all Washington’s huffing and puffing, it has barely changed its role), the rest of the world will see the costs accelerate,” Pettis said.
In short, a unilateral response is not the answer. Multilateralism is.
In a January paper, the IMF outlined reforms China should make to deemphasize exports and raise its own consumption levels — in essence, to get its own economy to consume the vast goods it produces.
These include increasing household consumption by raising social spending, scaling back business subsidies, and driving up China’s currency.
China could make these changes on its own. But there is a good chance it will only do so under serious pressure from others.
That is where a coalition of net importing economies comes in. If the G7 economies imposed high tariffs on China in concert, this might be enough to get China to change course.
As the former head of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England, Carney has the unparalleled credibility to lead on this issue. He has also shown an impressive ability to unite people around a common economic vision.
So far, however, he has shown little sign that he regards China’s export-driven growth model as a major threat to Canada’s manufacturing industry and economy at large.
At Davos, Carney spoke of the power that the middle powers have if they act together.
This is an opportunity to put that rhetoric into practice. As he said, if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.
