地缘贸易博客This blog considers how ideas and events framed by geography and trade shape our world, while sharing observations and analysis on discovery, transport, industry and much more.






Showing posts with label Geo-Trade Order. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geo-Trade Order. Show all posts

Friday, 2 May 2014

Tanzania - a new regional power house for East Africa - 坦桑尼亚



 
Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, 坦桑尼亚

China is playing a significant role in helping Tanzania to become the regional economic power house of East Africa by providing financial support in development of major infrastructure projects. 

Tanzania's 坦桑尼亚 economic fortunes have been boosted by the discovery of vast natural gas reserves in the southern regions of Mtwara and Lindi, but it is China's investment that is helping to bring the new gas resources on stream as it is financing the major energy and infrastructure projects .

China is financing a US$1.2 billion gas pipeline project from Mtwara to Dar es Salaam, which is expected to be completed later this year. Once completed, Tanzania will start to export its power to its East African neighbours in 2015.

In addition, China is also financing two mega-power projects at Kinyerezi area in Dar es Salaam, the Kinyerezi I and II which are expected to boost electricity generation for domestic consumption and export.

The Asian economic power house will also finance construction of a port, special economic zone and a railway network at the historical town of Bagamoyo on the coast in a project estimated to involve more than US$10 billion. 
 
Map of Tanzania 坦桑尼亚, Bagamoyo where the new port will be built

It is against this backdrop that Tanzania is on course to become the East African regional economic power. Tanzania is soon likely to have the potential  to become the regional centre for trade, manufacturing, logistics and IT upon completion of the major gas pipeline project and other mega electricity projects as well as the envisaged construction of Bagamoyo port.
 
Tanzania also has the potential to become the regional centre of tourism due to its tourists attractions including two out of seven wonders of the world. Tanzania is home to Mt. Kilimanjaro which at 5985m it is Africa's highest peak and the world's tallest freestanding mountain.

It is also home to the Serengeti National Park, famous for its annual migration of over 1.5 million white bearded wildebeest and 250,000 zebra. China is also working with Tanzania to improve tourist infrastructure such as hotels and transport services to make it an even more desirable tourist destination.

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Europe’s Smart Pivot: The European Union in the Asian Century

The Geo-Trade Blog endorses and reproduces in full an article by Javier Solana, published on 25 Jun 2013 on World Politics Review and on: http://javiersolana.esadeblogs.com. Javier Solana was the EU high representative for foreign and security policy, NATO secretary-general and foreign minister of Spain. He is currently president of the ESADEgeo Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics and distinguished fellow at the Brookings Institution.

Eastern Hemisphere: Europe & Asia
One of the key differences between Western and Asian cultures is their view of time: Whereas history is linear and consequential as seen from the West, Chinese and other Asian cultures perceive time as being cyclical. In the latter view, the emerging Asian century is simply a natural phase within this recurring flow. As renowned economist Angus Maddison showed, China and India were the world’s largest economies for centuries. Only upon the dawn of the Industrial Revolution did Western Europe and the “Western offshoots”—Maddison’s term for the U.S., Australia, New Zealand and Canada—catch up and overtake the Asian giants. The weight of the continents effectively changed as the technological advances of the Industrial Revolution shrank the relative effect of population size with respect to productivity and output.

Today, we are witnessing another such tipping of the scales. Asia is returning to its place in history, “re-emerging,” as it were, with China currently holding second place in the ranking of world economies and poised to take the lead in the near future. The wealth of opportunities and challenges surrounding these changes can only be managed through strategic thinking and cooperation on the part of all parties involved.

After nearly two centuries at the apex of the world economy, Europe, the "old” continent, together with its American counterparts, must now adapt to new realities. Though the United States’ role in Asia has traditionally been higher profile, particularly in security matters, it is undeniable that Europe is already looking east. Trade and investment links between the European Union and Asia are strong and dynamic: Speaking in regional terms, Asia has surpassed NAFTA to become the EU's main trading partner, constituting a third of total trade. More than 26 percent of EU outward investment is currently destined for Asia, while inward investment is also on the rise. China on its own is the EU’s second-biggest trading partner, after the United States.

In a global context of strong interdependence and flux, Europe must work from its strengths. It must draw on its history in order to play a constructive and active role in the transition toward the Asian century. Just last year, the European Union, the key piece in Europe’s institutional architecture, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its accumulated history of reconciliation and its contributions to peace. The EU and its predecessor organizations were indeed the fulcrum that turned a continent of war into a continent of peace and stability: What started as a commercial alliance developed into the most sophisticated regional institution on the planet. The EU and its member states are now facing the most acute difficulties in the union’s existence—but the construction’s historical role in achieving European stability is indubitable.

In contrast, Asia, in its current configuration, is still an unstable continent. Reconciliation was never achieved in a number of painful conflicts between its countries; borders remain contested, and disputes regularly flare up. These unhealed wounds are supremely delicate, particularly in the absence of a strong regional institutional network capable of containing sparks of conflict. Especially critical is the unbreakable nexus between security and trade, which looms large for Asia’s governments, dependent as they are on the endurance of steady, intelligent economic growth in their task of providing their young and dynamic populations with the means to shape their own lives.

A Vertiginous Ascent

The defining characteristic of Asia’s present rise has been its unprecedented, sustained growth rates. After the Industrial Revolution, it took Britain 150 years to double its economic output per capita. While the same doubling took the United States 50 years, China and India have recently achieved this feat in as little as 12 and 16 years, respectively. What is more, the Asian acceleration is affecting populations on an entirely different scale than in the past: The two Asian giants alone have taken no fewer than 2.5 billion people with them in their take-off, over a third of the earth’s population.

This growth explosion has granted a large portion of the global population positive freedoms that were formerly unattainable. China alone managed to lift 680 million people out of extreme poverty between 1981 and 2010, and the proportion of East Asians living on $1.25 per day plunged from 77.2 percent to 12.5 percent over the same three decades. However, there is still a long path ahead. According to the World Bank’s poverty indicators, for example, almost 70 percent of India’s 1.2 billion inhabitants still subsist on less than $2 per day.

Important challenges follow in the wake of these momentous changes. Countries will have to tackle domestic issues such as urbanization and the related issues of pollution and congestion. Resource stress is another cross-border problem that will not dissipate on its own. As hundreds of millions are catapulted into the global middle class, their demands grow—but the resources and energy required to meet these demands are in short supply.

The consumption shift is already taking on geo-economic and geopolitical expressions in the short term. They have recently hit front pages in the West: As America’s Smithfield Foods, the world’s largest pork producer, was targeted by a Chinese meat processing firm in an acquisition effort, the contours of the largest Chinese takeover of a U.S. corporation to date came into view. The long-term consequences, however—which require a type of policymaking that is perpetually subject to the effects of time discounting—are no less daunting. It is unquestionable that the negative externalities of the Asian demand hike and of the overall current brand of growth, such as rising greenhouse gas emissions and their contribution to climate change, will be felt globally.

Injecting Energy Into an Unstable Continent

As Asia heats up through the energy of its economy, its countries become more dynamic, multiplying both opportunities and risks. It is a well-known principle of physics that as energy is applied to moving gas molecules, collisions between them become both more frequent and more powerful. Since Asia lacks a strong network to soften, mitigate and contain potential friction, risk levels surge with the growing kinetic energy of its states.

The Asian paradox is thus as follows: Integration among Asian nations is deep in economic terms, but underlying security and political tensions are also deep and even growing, all without an undergirding set of norms, rules and institutions to manage the countervailing pressures. Asia is, in effect, an unfinished continent, where historical wounds did not fully heal and ragged scars remain where reconciliation was never achieved. Historical mistrust magnifies anxieties stemming from the asymmetric rise of certain countries within the continent.

Worrying signs of this phenomenon abound: Nationalism is on the rise and is repeatedly put on provocative display. Territorial disputes over unsettled borders, whether in barren stretches of no man’s land in the Himalayas or small islands in the South and East China Seas, flare up recurrently. Meanwhile, as military spending continues to decline in Europe and North America, it is on the rise in Asia, growing at 3.3 percent last year, according to SIPRI. Vietnam, in particular, increased its defense spending significantly in the face of the increasing naval assertiveness of its large neighbor. The second-largest military spender in the world, China, has increased its expenditure by 175 percent in real terms over the past decade, the largest increase for the period among the top 15 spenders in the world.

In our globalized and interdependent world, however, trade and security are inseparable. Take the ongoing spat between Tokyo and Beijing over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, for example, in which a territorial dispute saw Japan's auto exports to China plummet 80 percent in just three months last year. The security-economy nexus is one Europe understands all too well: It is indeed the foundation on which the European Union was built. It also forms a solid bedrock for European engagement with Asia: By way of its own experience, Europe is capable of contributing to the gradual construction of rules-based, cooperative security in Asia. The benefits of such cooperation, as well as further regional integration, would extend far beyond continental borders.

A Smart Pivot

Since World War II, Asia’s security stability has largely been based on U.S. guarantees. The United States has acted as an outside underwriter and balancer in the continent just across the Pacific—but today’s shifts in economic weight and the assertiveness that come with them are changing not just the perspectives, but also the stakes. In this context, the United States has commenced a pivot, more delicately termed “rebalancing,” toward Asia. Although President Barack Obama’s plan to focus more on Asia is clearly being hampered by dramatic events in the Middle East that continually clamor for his attention, America remains committed to its strategic reorientation.

In one of her final speeches as secretary of state, Hillary Clinton insisted that the U.S. wanted “Europe to engage more in Asia along with us: to see the continent not only as a market, but as a focus of common strategic engagement.” Following the tides of history, trade is the scout that moves quickly into new territories, generally with further engagement in tow. The EU’s trade relations with Asia already flow strong, and the ongoing bilateral free trade agreement (FTA) negotiations will serve to accelerate this critical stream. Nevertheless, European engagement does not stop at trade.

Herein lies the key to the EU’s reorientation toward Asia, which may at first sight appear illogical: The European Union is not a Pacific power and has never been seen as a great power in Asia. This, precisely and paradoxically, is part of its strength. Europe is engaged in Asia but does not represent a threat. The relations between the two continents are therefore not restricted to the sticky, black-or-white choice between competition and cooperation, but can and have advanced beyond such calculations. In a continent hardwired to focus on hard security and national interests, some might yet question Europe’s relevance. But Europe’s niche lies in outside-the-box thinking, in the kind of smart security that only diplomacy and institutionalized cooperation can bring. Along with its extensive experience in institutional architecture, the old continent has a unique toolbox on offer.

Working From Experience: Regional Integration

Europe’s history has proved that regional integration is a powerful path to a more peaceful coexistence, creating fertile ground for trade to prosper. Clearly, it is also a fruitful area for development within Asia, whose regional network will require strengthening to absorb the shocks that can arise within the energetic continent. In Southeast Asia, one such institution is already firmly in place: the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which is now almost 50 years old. ASEAN’s institutional architecture bears the closest resemblance to the EU’s structure of any regional organization in the world, making it a natural and like-minded partner for the union.

As ASEAN continues to evolve, striving toward its goal of three-pillared integration—political-military, economic and socio-cultural—by 2015, EU support to the project will be invaluable. Recent experiences have reminded us, however, that experiments in regional integration are anything but effortless. These structural building exercises are novel in world history, and as in any innovation process, each failure represents a lesson learned and a way forward. ASEAN, for one, operates in a particularly challenging environment, where many of its interlocutors prefer traditional bilateralism over multilateralism, to a degree that can be damaging to the regional integration process.

From its side, the EU is working through a range of difficult issues brought front and center by the storm winds of the global economic crisis. These struggles are likely to have a twofold effect on the region-to-region association. On one hand, some of the challenges to regional integration have been exposed. As is the way of European integration, however, these hurdles too will ultimately be overcome, doubtless providing fruitful lessons for future integration blueprints—in Europe and elsewhere.

On the other hand, Europe’s dire economic situation highlights and enhances the need to harness growth. One of the main channels of opportunity is the emerging markets of Asia. Here too, the ASEAN-EU link, which represents a combined market of more than a billion people, is paramount. The bloc of 10 ASEAN member states is the EU's third-largest trading partner outside Europe, with more than $270 billion in goods and services traded in 2011. For ASEAN, the EU is the second-largest trading partner after China and the largest provider of investment by far, averaging some $12 billion annually from 2000 to 2009.

Reinforced relations with ASEAN will also prove critical if the EU is to continue on its path to becoming an official participant in the East Asia Summit. An encouraging sign in the relationship upgrade came last year, when the European Union was finally legally able to sign ASEAN’s Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, and an additional stumbling block was removed from the equation when Myanmar recently shifted to political reforms and opening.

The Security Niche

Beyond the two-way institutional bonds, Europe brings further concrete experience to the table in Eurasian relations. Not too long ago, Europe was a war-torn continent crisscrossed with deep wounds and trenches. It has since then been uniquely successful in reconciling the once-warring parties, making it well-placed to share its conflict resolution experiences. This is one aspect of a second axis to Europe’s smart pivot, which builds on instrumental cooperation in such nontraditional security areas as maritime security, humanitarian assistance, disaster prevention and response, and peacekeeping.

The EU’s first-ever European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) mission in Asia is a concrete demonstration of Europe’s contribution to strategic stability in Asia. It was Jakarta that formally invited the EU to lead a monitoring mission in Aceh after signing the Helsinki Memorandum of Understanding with the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) in 2005. In cooperation with five ASEAN countries—Thailand, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Singapore—as well as with Norway and Switzerland, the EU’s Aceh Monitoring Mission monitored the implementation of various aspects of the peace agreement, including disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of GAM fighters and the implementation of the legislative changes in the MOU. While Asia’s circumstances are undeniably very different from Europe’s, the “old” continent’s expertise has already shown its value in the East.

There are many other concrete security areas that connect even more directly to trade. The South China Sea, for example, sees the passage of more than half of the world’s commercial shipping. Asia’s seas and straits are therefore extremely sensitive. One concrete danger, as recognized by Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand in their Malacca Strait Patrol initiative, is piracy. In the adjacent Indian Ocean, the EU has been implementing successful counterpiracy measures since 2008. The lessons from Operation Atalanta are already bearing fruit, leading to joint military operations between the EU and its strategic partner India in the Indian Ocean.

Increasing Flow Rates: Trade Liberalisation

Today’s global crisis has provided irrefutable proof that the link between economic growth and stability is bidirectional: Both for Europe’s advanced economies with their corresponding demographics and for Asia’s extremely young, burgeoning populations, growth is vital. Despite its present difficulties, Europe continues to hold great opportunity as the world’s largest economy, with half a billion consumers in a $16.7 trillion market. Asia is the European Union’s largest trading partner, accounting for 42.5 percent of total trade in 2011. South and East Asia’s exports to the EU may have fallen by 7.2 percent last year, but trade ties remain robust, and the incredible economic potential for both parties is obvious. It is critical to fully grasp that potential, by stepping up trade and investment initiatives and continuing ongoing trade liberalization.

It was Asia’s opening to international trade, first implemented by the Asian tigers and later advanced by China, that propelled Asia forward in its cycle of re-emergence. This opening has continued in the form of a three-dimensional proliferation of trade liberalization agreements: From intraregional agreements whose number—counting both established and developing agreements—has quintupled over the past 12 years, to bilateral agreements with non-Asian nations and larger-scale projects such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

Last year’s EU-South Korea FTA, which was the first bilateral EU-Asian FTA to enter into force, was the first of a new generation of free trade agreements. The deal is comprehensive in scope, rapid in implementation and high in ambition: 98.7 percent of EU-Korean commerce is set to be tariff-free after five years. With the EU-Singapore FTA scheduled to enter into force this year, negotiations with Malaysia, India and Vietnam ongoing, and formal negotiations recently commenced with Japan and Thailand, the EU is providing an unequivocal signal of its commitment to free trade and its openness to business with exterior markets. This momentum must continue and be fit securely into a strong, long-term EU strategy in order to harness the economic growth that is so critical to all sides.

The Global Dimension: Shared Interests

Throughout history, the world’s economic heavyweights have carried corresponding and sometimes oversized shares of global political and strategic power. Great powers’ influence works most efficiently when it is enshrined within globally accepted frameworks and channels. Unilateral actions, by actors large and small, can provoke dangerous effects that carry with them the risk of collateral damage. On the other hand, the legitimacy and effectiveness of the world’s global governance structures depend on constant evolution to suit the shape of their participants. Only continuous development can ensure that the world’s stabilizing systems do not fall into disuse and irrelevance; this is another challenge the international community urgently needs to face.

Given China’s growth rates and the size of the population it is bringing along with it on its rise, Europe clearly would like to see a more engaged and constructive role for China in global governance issues. Moreover, Europe is an excellent partner for Beijing, which feels more comfortable on the global front in a G-3 constellation with the Europeans than alone with the United States. In a possible G-2 relationship with the U.S., the hegemon that shaped the current international system, the forces of competition presently prevail over the possible benefits of cooperation. This international panorama sets an optimal scene for the fourth aspect of Euro-Asian engagement, the global dimension.

One of Europe’s unique advantages is its experience in bringing together diverse coalitions of parties to get things done. This instrumental diplomacy and the international legitimacy it brings could suit China well. By identifying key areas of alignment on the global front, China and Europe could intelligently combine their complementary forces to move affairs along swiftly, sending constructive international signals. The seven local emissions-trading schemes poised to launch in China, which drew lessons from the EU’s pioneering initiative, in addition to reports of possible moves toward a Chinese carbon cap in 2016, make climate change an excellent starting point for Sino-European strategic cooperation on the global stage. Such targeted alliances, with their high impact factors, would improve more than just the meteorological climate.

Asian and European interests may also converge in the Middle East. The region is as combustible as ever, but now there are strong signals of circumstantial change. While the U.S. is attempting to shift its focus to the East in light of both domestic energy developments and global economic shifts, Asia is growing ever more dependent on the Middle East for its growing energy needs. According to International Energy Agency forecasts, 90 percent of Middle Eastern oil exports will be destined for Asia by 2035. This kind of dependence can turn toxic without a degree of strategic engagement. With its international focus and presence, Europe, the Middle East’s direct neighbor, is a natural and instrumental partner to Asia.

The Way Ahead: Resolutely Pivoting Forward

As the world’s trade flows consolidate their new directions, political and strategic power must naturally follow. The final destination of these flows, however, is for now an unstable place. As energy pools in Asia, its networks are tested and its unhealed wounds strained. What Asia needs is strategic stability, the kind Europe has achieved through cutting-edge design projects of regional integration unique to this world. This is at the heart of the EU’s smart pivot East, a pivot that commenced with trade but must be sustained and redirected based on strong ingredients of the “old” continent’s history.

Present-day events show with increasing intensity that Europe cannot navel-gaze as the world transforms. It badly needs the growth that Asian markets can provide. It is critical, however, that European nations refrain from building familiar roadblocks on this route to growth. A renationalisation of foreign policy toward the world’s most vibrant actor is understandably tempting, but it will ultimately damage both national and EU interests.

With dynamics unmarred by the disturbances of great power struggles, the EU is well-placed to engage with Asia. The cooperative dynamics described here, which target concrete areas of synergy and instrumental collaborations, both intercontinental and global, stand to bring both continents great returns.

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

New Trade Routes through the Arctic between Asia and Europe

 
Map of new shipping routes between Asia and Europe Source: The Economist

New Shipping routes between Asia and Europe 

The ice in the Artic is melting away at a record-breaking rate opening up new possibilities for shipping routes. Measurements taken in August 2012 found the levels of Arctic sea ice were at their lowest levels since satellites began measuring the ice in 1979. In 30 to 40 years, it is quite possible that there will not be no summer ice at all. This has led to an increased interest in shipping in the Arctic. New shipping routes opening up due to the melting ice could cut shipping times between Asian and European ports by up to a third. It is possible that the first commercial trade voyage could take place as early as summer 2013 led by China, and the potential value of goods travelling the new Arctic routes could become highly significant.


Xue Long 雪龙 expedition throught the Northern Sea Route 

China has been taking a strong interest in the region over the last decade, building a physical presence and using diplomacy and trade ties to engage in the region. The Chinese ship Xue Long (Snow Dragon) 雪龙 became the first ship to sail the Bering Sea after crushing the ice across the Arctic Ocean in August 2012. The icebreaker sailed all along the Northern Sea Route into the Barents Sea and returned by sailing a straight line from Iceland to the Bering Strait via the North Pole.

China has also set up a multidisciplinary research base with 18 researchers called the Yellow River Station on Svalbard the Norwegian archipelago (See map above) since 2004. The Xue Long 雪龙 voyage in summer 2012 was a culmination of China's research so far and a test of the Northern sea route to check out the feasibility of it becoming a new shipping route through the Artic that could link Asian and European ports. China has also recently commissioned a new 120m icebreaker ship to be built by a company in Finland to further its Arctic research. 

New Asian permanent observers on the Arctic Council in 2013 

The rules of the Arctic Council state that only countries with territories in the Arctic can become full members of the Artic Council. Nevertherless at the biennial meeting of the Council on 15 May 2012 in Sweden, 5 Asian countries: China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, India and Italy became permanent observers. China, sees itself as a “near-Arctic state”, and had been seeking to become a permanent observer since 2006 (it had previously has its application rejected three times). But this time with Iceland's support and with the possibility of China and Iceland setting up a new Arctic forum, the members of the Arctic Council decided to widen the Council to include their Asian counterparts.

Interestingly, most of the new joiners were already observers on an ad hoc basis. The six new members will not have speaking or voting rights. But they will be able to influence decisions in the council’s six working groups with their expertise, research and potential funding of initiatives in the Arctic. China, for example, has led five marine expeditions in the Arctic since 1999, including the Xue Long 雪龙 voyage in summer 2012. Japan and South Korea may decide to conduct their research with their own icebreakers ships too. The new Asian observers will bring fresh new ideas to the Arctic region and advance the use of new faster trade routes between Asia and Europe over coming years. The Geo-Trade Blog will continue to follow developments in the Arctic.

Saturday, 23 February 2013

Chinese renminbi 中国人民币 – the new currency of the 21st Century

Chinese renminbi 中国人民币

The Internationalisaltion of the 中国人民币

Before the 2013 Spring Festival 春节, the People's Bank of China named the Singapore branch of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China the clearing bank for yuan in Singapore. China sees Singapore as its regional partner for the extension of yuan internationalisation. The aim is that the emergence of new offshore centers will expand the existing regime instead of creating competing systems.

So far, Hong Kong has had a good eight-year head start and remains the dominant offshore center of the Chinese currency, handling around 80pc of offshore trading.

Once the clearing mechanism is set up in Singapore, there will be greater transparency in the movement of yuan funds. Singapore will be the gateway for China in the Southeast Asia, which provides a platform for Beijing to facilitate wider use of yuan in trading with Southeast Asian nations.

London and the Chinese renminbi
中国人民币

At present, a cross-border trade settlement scheme is driving liquidity into 人民币
offshore markets. The size of the offshore 人民币 liquidity pool a financial centre can generate, therefore, largely rests on bilateral trading volume. Compared with Hong Kong, which had $283.5bn of bilateral trade with mainland China in 2011, the UK’s trade with China was only worth $58.7bn. Further, the 人民币 is barely used as a trade settlement currency in UK-China trade. 

London is therefore limited by liquidity concerns, even though it hosts deposits of 人民币109bn. This issue will remain a challenge until the 人民币 becomes fully convertible as an international currency. The City could perhaps attract a significant volume of 人民币 resources through its advantage in global foreign exchange trading. But, for as long as the cross-border trade settlement scheme remains the major pillar in China’s 人民币 strategy, the City will not be a become a big player. 

A second stumbling block is the technical difficulty caused by the 人民币 clearing system. In the offshore 人民币 market, up until now only Hong Kong has been thoroughly equipped with both the 人民币 real-time gross settlement system, which allows swift, large fund transactions, and with a人民币 clearing bank, Bank of China (Hong Kong). 

London is lacking this critical 人民币 settlement system. It also doesn’t have a local人民clearing bank. Even if the City is in a good position to gear up global demand, the majority of those offshore 人民币 transactions still have to be conducted via Hong Kong. As a result, market practitioners see less benefit in concentrating their 人民币 businesses in London. Multinational corporations can simply shift 人民币 deals to Hong Kong branches (or perhaps to Singapore). In other words, until London has the requisite financial infrastructure, it will struggle to be more competitive. 

Thirdly, and perhaps of most concern, is the differing understanding of Beijing’s 人民币 internationalisation strategy in the Bank of England and the UK Treasury. China’s 人民币 strategy is a policy-driven process, with deep public sector involvement. The most evident example is the role of bilateral currency swap agreements. In Beijing’s view, a bilateral agreement between central banks has profound implications beyond the intrinsic value of the swap itself. It represents a will to jointly develop 人民币 offshore business at the level of officialdom.

However, the Bank of England sees limited value in establishing a line in currency swaps. The 人民币 is not yet fully convertible, and the size of its global offshore market is neither large or liquid. The Bank insists that the private sector should take the initiative. It therefore remains reluctant to get involved in the swap issue. The UK Treasury, on the other hand, is making great efforts to initiate policy dialogue with Beijing and Hong Kong. It wants to push the City towards the front tier of the 人民币 offshore business, and thereby boost the economy through a closer relationship between China and the UK.

While the development of the offshore 人民币 market remains contingent upon China’s financial reform process, whether the Bank of England and the UK Treasury can take collective action will ultimately determine the City’s future in the 人民币 internationalisation game. The Geo-Trade Blog will continue to follow closely new developments on the internationalisaltion of the Chinese renminbi  中国人民币.


Sunday, 27 January 2013

Geography and Demography are Destiny

Geographical view of the Américas

Geography is the backdrop of human history. The position of a country on a map is the first element that truely defines it, so much more than its government is able to. Geographical distortions can be as revealing of the long-range intentions of governments, for example, the melting of the Arctic, allows a glimpse of the possible future shipping routes between Asia and Europe and the geo-trade options that this could bring about.



Demography is destiny



The US is in the midst of a new demographic, cultural and political moment. Interestingly the extension of the US border southwards in the early 19th Century to incorporate newly won land from México into the US is now facing a seismic demographic change in the 21st century - in coming decades hispanos from the wider Américas will become more than a quarter of the US electorate. 

Hispanos currently represent 17pc of the US population, and hispanic population growth is set to turn the US into a country where fewer than half the population will be non-Hispanic whites within 20 years. This shift will create a new demographic reality in the US. This point was heavily illustrated in the messages of Obama's recent presidential inauguration speech. A Cuban-American became the first hispano to recite the official inaugural poem. Rev Luis León delivered an inaugural benediction with phrases spoken in Spanish. And Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the first hispanic on the Supreme Court, administered the oath of office to Vice President Joe Biden.

Geography and Economic Growth



The notion that Mexico offers only cheap labour no longer rings true in the 21st Century. México produces around 115,000 engineering students every year, almost three times as many as the US on an annual basis. Hence machine specialists are usually easier to find in Tijuana than in many big US cities. As are, accountants experienced in production economics and other highly skilled workers.



Today, in the 21st century, Tijuana is becoming to San Diego what Shenzhen is to Hong Kong. Travel between San Diego and Tijuana is around 20 minutes, with no passport required. Although a passport is needed to come back, but there are fast-track lanes for business people. Many employees commute across the border each day, good doctors are cheaper and easier to find in Tijuana, as are private schools. In some ways, the border feels more like the  borders between the members of the EU than a divide between two countries.



And it’s not just Tijuana. To the east, in Juárez, Dell computers are built by Foxconn, the company that manufactures more than 40pc of the world’s electronics (including Apple’s iPhone and iPad). To the south, in Querétaro, a factory builds the transmissions that General Motors installs in its Corvettes. The design of General Electric’s GEnx turbine jet engine and the production of interior elements of Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner also happen in México. In fact, manufactured goods are the country’s chief export, with private investment in this sector among the highest in the world.



Once again geography is destiny too, the shorter and more nimble a supply chain is, the better. Hence México is benefiting from its proximity to the US to feed the demand for just-in-time manufacturing. And the demographics of producing the right mix of highly-skilled workers have combined with it to create growth and prosperity in the 21st Century. 






Sunday, 16 December 2012

Values in the 21st Century - Europe, US and China

围棋 based on encircling your opponent on the Board provides an insight into Chinese values

Max Weber and Karl Marx, the founders of modern sociology, underestimated the importance of the way people in power think, behave and persuade others of the supremacy of their values. 


The Soldier, the Merchant and the Sage

Throughout most of history three groups, the soldier, the merchant and the sage, have struggled to gain predominance over a fourth group, the greater populous. When one of these groups achieves unchallenged control over the others the result has culminated in an imbalance of values leading to war, economic disaster or revolution.


Interestingly, most societies are based on an informal alliance between two of these three groups. For example, early agrarian societies were often led by aristocrats with warrior and landowner values (soldiers) in close alliance with priests (sages), who provided a spiritual justification for their rule. The merchant was usually tolerated for bringing wealth through trade, but was also resented for being cleverer and often richer than traditional elites.


During the 17th century, the merchant's power increased and decreased always dependent on protection from the soldier group. But it was not until the late 17th century that merchants first began to emerge as the dominant group in Europe. 
 

During the 19th century the rise of “soft" merchant values really took off. The British used their growing empire as a force for promoting free trade and globalisation in the so called interests of all. Nevertheless their competitors regarded these imperial projects as less benign. By the mid-19th century, the world of merchants was becoming one of competing business cartels, increasingly backed by the might of Nation States. But no country adopted the values of the “warrior-hard merchant” with more vigour than Bismarckian Germany, where repression at home and brutal zero-sum commercial competition with other rising industrial powers became the order of the day. The first world war was largely a consequence of the limits of allowing  merchant values to become the dominant group of values.


After the first world war, the US emerged as the wealthiest nation and dominant exporter of capital. This led to the spread of a new form of merchant power across much of the developed world in the form of debt-fuelled consumer capitalism. Yet the massive financial and trade imbalances that resulted again brought the dominance of merchant values to an end with the  Depression in the early 1930s.


The second world war ultimately inspired a new alliance of “sagely technocrats” and “soft merchants”. They were determined to learn the lessons of the past, this partnership worked to create a new world order of prosperity and social harmony. The early fruit of the combination of these values was the Bretton Woods monetary system, which established the rules governing commercial relations between the developed industrial nations.
 

Interestingly, the collapse of the Bretton Woods System in 1971, heralded a new renaissance of the dominance of hard merchant values. This period was led by the Anglosphere and was characterised by the so-called Washington consensus and "Davos Man". It launched a renewed age of the dominance of merchant values without the sagely values to reign it in. This age still continues today. To understand the banking and sovereign-debt crisis that has taken hold since 2007/08, the Geo-Trade Blog believes the US and Europe are paying the price for succumbing to the values of merchants, who believe in the justice of the market, and prize the pursuit of short-term profit fuelled by credit and risk. 
 

But perhaps there is a much broader problem. Modern democratic governments in the US and Europe play a much larger role in the economy than any governments in the ancient Greek democracies could ever have imagined, therefore, this in turn makes political leaders a huge source of patronage, in the form of business contracts, social benefits, jobs and tax breaks.

What are China's中国 values ?

Perhaps a more interesting question in the 21st century is, which of these three groups, the soldier, the merchant and the sage will gain dominance in a China led world? China owes its re-emergence to its embrace of the contemporary US and European model of modernisation – to a large extent driven by hard merchant values that put the country on its current path more than three decades ago. But the question of values remains unanswered.

It is interesting to note that Chinese traditional values are being replaced by what researchers have identified as an emphasis on material values - making money has become a major concern for most Chinese people. The new material values are expressed by a desire to buy apartments, cars and fashionable clothes. Showing external signs of wealth has become a basic social requirement.

The Chinese do not play chess, a game with a rather adversarial objective to eliminate your opponent from the board. Instead the Chinese invented 围棋 where the object of the game is to encircle your opponent and gain control of a larger total area of the board (see above picture). To some extent, this provides an insight into the different ways of thinking in Europe and the US compared with China 中国. 


In traditional Chinese culture, righteousness, or justice are perceived to be an important value. If democracy can protect an individual's political rights, it would seem the Chinese are sceptical as to whether it can ensure that people use their power to do the right thing. In Chinese culture, the legality and morality of procedure as well as the result are both just as important. Here in lies the eternal challenge that all democracies are forced to grapple with - what if the laws and democratic processes do produce “immoral” results, for example, an extreme-right wing party is able to win power in democratic elections or what of wars fought by a country that are not supported by its citizens.

In conclusion, it would seem that there is some commonality of horizon but the ways of thinking and framing problems remain different. It is still too soon to tell what combination of the Soldier, Sage and Merchant values will emerge in China 中国 as dominant but the Geo-Trade blog will continue to follow closely the new thinking on values emanating from China 中国 in the 21st Century.

Saturday, 24 November 2012

A new Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) for the Asia Pacific Region

Map of the new Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership

China is set to commence negotiations to create a 16-nation trade bloc, known as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which has recently been announced at the ASEAN summit in Phnom Penh that concluded in late November 2012. The RCEP will include the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand, and will have the effect of lowering trade barriers and custom duties across the region by the end of 2015. ASEAN includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

In the Asia-Pacific region, economic alliance negotiations have mostly so far been conducted bilaterally.The six ASEAN partner countries, including China, Japan, Australia, India, South Korea and New Zealand, already have respective Free Trade Agreements (FTA) with the ASEAN nations. But the envisioned extensive FTA would be created by expanding the existing frameworks. The countries will beging to hold first-round talks with the aim of concluding the negotiations at the end of 2015. Nevertheless, this is not to say that the new FTA will be easily achieved, there are many challenging tasks to be accomplished before it can produce effective results.


China will become No. 1

The OECD believes that within 50 years China and India will have become the major economic powers of the world. The organisation that brings together the 32 most industrialised countries of the world maintains that these two countries will account for almost half of the world's wealth in 2060.

In a report entitled
A Look at 2060: An overview of long-term growth, the OECD concluded that the global economy will grow at a rate of 3pc over the next 50 years. The OECD estimates that the current economic crisis will fade and the world economy will grow with consistency, but with a different pattern to the current. The Report identifies that emerging countries will behave with more vigor and growth, but gradually their evolution will slow and will go on to match the average of the current OECD countries.

This uneven pace of economic growth will lead to a radical change in the world balance. The combined GDP of China and India will soon overtake the European economies and exceed that of all current members of the OECD in 2060. In 2060, China will have economic growth of 4pc and will increase its specific share of the global economy from 17pc to 28pc of the total.

The euro area which now accounts for 17pc of the global economy, according to OECD projections in 50 years will only account for 9pc of the total. Furthermore, the US whose economy currently represents 23pc of the world economy will reduce its weight to 17pc in 2060.

Australia's place in the Asia-Pacific Region

At the end of October 2012, Australia published a policy white paper that looks at its role of being a European country in the Asia-Pacific region.

Australia has European cultural origins and other alignments which sometimes hamper its image in the Asia Pacific Region. But nevertheless it relies increasingly on Asian immigration, especially from China and India, to ensure its economy competitiveness and to meet the annual residence quota within its population policy.

It has considerable security interests in its territory and maritime zones, but it only has a small population of 23 million. It is a US ally but it also has close economic and increasingly societal ties with China who has become its top trading partner in recent years.

Interestingly, Qantas, its national airline, has just re-positioned itself as a new regional hub-and-spoke network airline to service the Asia-Pacific region. It has abandoned its flights to Europe choosing instead to enter into a partnership agreement with Emirates flying its customers to the Dubai hub where they will be able to connect to other destinations outside the Asia-Pacific Region.

The Geo-Trade Blog will continue to follow closely how Australia continues to engage with the Asia-Pacific region and how it develops its strategic policy alignments with China and the US, particularly whether they will be governed by cultural affiliation with the US or by economic interests in the Asia Pacific Region.