Title: Mondialisation et Chine: Vers une tranformation mutuelle
1Yves Tiberghien, Harvard University China and
Globalization Toward a Mutual Transformation
Presentation at the CÉRIUMs Summer
SchoolChina Risen How it changes and change us
2China and Globalization Toward a Mutual
Transformation
- Yves Tiberghien
- Harvard Academy Scholar
- ytiberghien_at_wcfia.harvard.edu
- CERIUM-Summer School,
- July 5, 2006
3From this
4To this
5Preliminary Test - Who are they?
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8Who is this cow-boy?
9What about this event?
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11And this event?
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13Presentation Outline
- 1. Stakes and Big Picture
- 2. Impact of Globalization on China
- 3. Some Chinese Vulnerabilities in the Process
- 4. Impact of China on Globalization
- 5. Some Essential Milestones
141. Stakes
- 1) The process of Chinese modernization has
entered a new phase of intense internationalizatio
n since 1997. Does it destabilize China? Can the
Chinese state maintain control over the process?
Is the balance between a communist regime and a
market economy sustainable? - 2) Can the global economic system absorb China
without getting destabilized? Will levels of
national political support last? - 3) Will Chinas integration into the
international system force a global power
transition? Can the transition be managed
peacefully?
15Key Points
- 1. Until Now, China has kept an astonishing
degree of control over the process of
globalization and has managed to influence the
sharing of benefits. - 2. The current path leads to new milestones that
may be harder to manage. - 3. The continuation of mutual gains depends on
political factors in the US, the EU, and Japan,
as well as a wise management of relations with
the US.
162. Globalization and China Many Benefits
17A/ FDI Flows and Technology Transfers
18Key Points on FDI flows
- Cumulated Total in 2004 600 billion, much
beyond other developing countries - Concentration in a few regions Pear River Delta,
Fujian, Shanghai area, a few cities. - 22 of FDI MA
- Impact on SOEs competitive pressures, some
crowding out, discipline effects - Impact on the generation of laws and rules
- Rise of a transnational elite
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20Wuhan Citroen Factory
21B/ Trading Boom
22A few Key Figures in 2005
- Trade Surplus with the US (total with world)
reached 200 Billion. - 2004 China became Japans first trade partner
200 billion total trade (surplus of 15 bn for
Japan) - Enormous production 85 of worlds tractor
production, 75 of world watches, 70 of world
toys, 50 of world PCs.
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27C/ Growing Financial Weight
- Jan 2006 Chinas foreign reserves reached 816
Billion, 2 of world, just behind Japan. Key for
stability of US. - China can influence the world forex markets, just
by changing the mix of its foreign reserve
holdings. - Growing of US Treasury Bonds held by China (cf
related debates during Katrina last summer).
28New Fact Explosion in Chinese Outward FDI
- 2004 8000 Chinese companies present in 160
countries - Lenovo purchases IBMs PC division
- Oil Companies very Active (cf Battle CNOOC-
UNOCAL in the US) - Well-Known Names Huawei (telecom), Ningbo, Haier
(electric appliances)
29Summary of Economic Picture in Context of
Globalization
- Economic Growth 10 per Year
- GDP (just revalued in 2005) now superior to FR,
probably passing UK this year. Will pass Japan in
2020 and the US in 2040. - Chinese growth 18 of world growth in 2004.
- Technological rise
- Trade explosion since 1995 3 world exporter in
2004, 8 of world exports. - Huge impact on world oil market
- Large role in all global issues, soon likely in
G8 (G9) - Rapid military modernization
30Economic By-Product Growing Military Budget
313. Some Chinese Vulnerabilities
- Is the hands-on approach to globalization
sustainable? - Is the trajectory domestically stable and
sustainable? precarious banks, rising tensions
in the countryside, iron rice bowl now broken
(xiagang gongren) - Can the regime retain its political legitimacy in
the context of SOE restructuring and a social
contract in tatters? - Politically, is the regime stable over time?
- Risks related to national unity (growing
inequalities)
32Key Point SOE Restructuring
- Since 1997, SOE restructuring has become a key
bottleneck for Chinas integration in the world
economy (development of competitive companies). - Recent acceleration of the process 58 of SOEs
disappeared between 1997 and 2002, 92 of
collective enterprises. - Several pathways followed identification of 1000
national champions, mergers, bankruptcies, or
privatization for smaller SOEs. - Use of WTO as Troyan horse?
33Social Impact
- 50 Million workers laid-off between 1997 and 2003
in SOEs - Collapse of living conditions
- Concentration in North-East 27 M workers
laid-off, 16 of entire population in Fushun,
7.5 in Shenyang - Many protests, riots, and petitions
- Pressure to build a welfare system
34The Mingong - migrant workers
- 140 Million migrant workers with limited legal
identity and protection - Still attached to their rural hometowns
- Comparative advantage for China or exploitation?
35Another weak point the stock market
- Created in 1991 in the midst of euphoria
- Aim raising funds for SOEs
- Only a third of shares are sold, other 2/3 remain
controlled by state directly or indirectly - Weak corporate governance, question marks about
quality of regulators, weak minority shareholder
protection
364. Impact of China on Globalization
- Key lessons gradualism works, the state has a
key role in managing the process, power matters. - Convergence? No! A socialist market economy is
compatible with the globalization - Trade theories of comparative advantage and free
trade pushed to the limit, due to size and speed
of Chinas entry into the trading system.
Adjustment takes time and has human costs. - Flying Geese Theory also pushed to the limits
- On the interaction between development and
democracy, was Lipsett wrong? - The Unknown how stable is the process?
375. Five Key Debates in Recent Years
- A/ The Asian Crisis salutary role played by
China in stopping the domino reaction - Chinese choices come out reinforced
- Another lesson any financial vulnerability can
be exploited by other economic powers - B/ Hong Kongs peculiar role during the Asian
crisis
38Other Debates
- C/ Global Exchange Rates the Chinese Debate
- D/ Energy, oil, raw materials the role of
diplomacy is rediscovered - E/ WTO rise role played by China within the G 22
group - F/ Global Environment Treaties
- G/ GMOs Pivotal Role played by China
39A Striking Example Airbus, dec05
40Conclusion
- Rediscovery of the role of politics in managing
global economic flows. - China is able to benefit from globalization, due
to its political and economic power and to its
political stability - a state able to manage
transition - Challenging some of the key debates on
globalization (convergence, loss of maneuvering
space) - At the same time, the sustainability of the
current equilibrium hangs on international
political relations and on the capacity of the
current regime to manage a painful social
transition (and rising inequalities).
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