男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Opinion
Home / Opinion / Experts

Tanks rather than thanks

Contrary to the claims of the US and the EU, China is not flooding the world with loss-making EVs

By DANNY QUAH | China Daily Global | Updated: 2024-07-12 07:47
Share
Share - WeChat
SONG CHEN/CHINA DAILY

The United States and the European Union have been hyping up allegations that China's overcapacity is a cause of unfair trade. The Joe Biden administration has used this as an excuse to quadruple to 100 percent tariffs on China-made electric vehicles.

Economic competition in important forward-looking, save-the-planet sectors is a good thing. But the assertion often made is that the rivalry here is also strategic. Some months ago at an academic conference in the US, I asked why EVs are a matter of national security. Two US experts enlightened me: "Tanks. We make the best military attack vehicles when ours are the best automotive technologies."

In a related move, although less hardline, the EU is imposing tariffs of up to 38 percent on Chinese EVs. The reason is that it is what is required to level the playing field against China's "unfair economic practices".

Unlike concerns surrounding national security — where even magnets and rubber tires are suspect — economic reasoning can be publicly interrogated using empirical evidence.

What is overcapacity? If it were no more than what the English language says it is, then overcapacity is just capacity that arithmetically exceeds use. In economics, it is excess of supply over demand; it is how much is produced over how much is consumed. In international trade, overcapacity in this sense is exports minus imports, for that is how much more an economy produces than it consumes. This isn't very useful, however, as comparative advantage implies every economy will have overcapacity in some sector.

An alternative view is that overcapacity refers to an unlevel playing field, i.e., where one side doesn't play fair. That side is a nation that applies slave labor, practices economic coercion and uses illegally-sourced raw materials, operates low-standard engineering processes, thereby emitting excessive CO2 and pollution, and subsidizes industry or otherwise distorts markets in ways that violate international rules. Such a nation is then unfairly able to produce at cost lower than others who appropriately obey rules.

In June 2024 the World Trade Organization registered 49 dispute cases against China, with the US raising 23 of them and the EU 11. However, China is not alone in facing dispute action for not obeying rules. Indeed, at that same time the WTO recorded 171 cases against the US, with China raising just 18 and the EU 35. In other words, the dispute cases against the US are more than three times the number against China.

One of these complaints I've heard in other discussions, is that China might well be producing clean-energy machines, but it does so using dirty energy. This needs to be documented; I have seen no credible empirical evidence supporting it. And further questions should be asked: how are other nations making their clean-energy machines? Should dirty energy never be applied to invest in cleaner energy devices? Is it preferred to use dirty energy so that it has no obvious impact on future possibilities for clean energy?

A more appropriate and more immediate way to look at overcapacity is how many economists might do so, that is via the concept of dumping: Is the exporter selling in a foreign country at a price lower than it sells in its own, and hence is it running losses on its own account so as to harm that foreign country? It is easier to get evidence on this. That evidence, however, does not support the hypothesis of Chinese overcapacity. Many Chinese products — especially batteries and EVs — are cheaper in China than in the EU or the US. This is hardly surprising in light of the so-called Balassa-Samuelson effect, which says poorer countries are cheaper countries.

Are Chinese industries accused of overcapacity seen to be making losses? Market competition in China is fierce. But many Chinese industries, especially EVs, are profitable in the aggregate. Some individual businesses of course do fail, but that is evidence of creative destruction, not of dumping. The Chinese government does provide subsidies in the EV industry, but it does so for consumers to purchase EVs, not for producers to make them. Those consumer subsidies can be used to purchase Teslas just as easily as they can use to buy BYDs. Arguably, such consumer subsidies ought to be used more in all other economies to encourage the transition to clean-energy vehicles and away from fossil-fuel combustion.

Is China flooding Western markets with clean-energy products? China's total exports of EVs are only 14 percent of its aggregate production, a smaller fraction than that of cars exported by Japan and the Republic of Korea. Yes, that means more in absolute numbers — but penalizing a country for its size is a different economic argument than claiming it is breaking international trade rules. And, on the other side of the exchange: What fraction of total new car sales in the US are China-made EVs? Two percent.

While rightly looking out for their own industries and businesses, everyone needs to think a little also about the good of our planet. Simply put, the world needs clean cheap energy. To gain any reasonable measure of control over their own destiny, emerging economies will need massive sustained bursts of energy. The less-developed countries cannot afford costly technologies to replace fossil fuels and, as a result, unless things change, the Global South will be responsible for most of the world's impending carbon emissions. These countries are not agitating about clean-energy overcapacity: for the 70 percent of humanity that lives there, for a long while still, there is no state of the world where there are too many EVs, too much electric battery storage, or too many solar panels.

The author is Li Ka-shing professor in economics and dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at National University of Singapore. The author contributed this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

Contact the editor at editor@chinawatch.cn.

Most Viewed in 24 Hours
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 灵武市| 松原市| 和龙市| 北京市| 朝阳市| 晋中市| 石泉县| 罗平县| 建昌县| 四平市| 楚雄市| 鸡泽县| 阳江市| 深州市| 海淀区| 庄河市| 锡林浩特市| 灌南县| 东丰县| 迭部县| 三门峡市| 团风县| 南开区| 平谷区| 南郑县| 胶州市| 宣城市| 石河子市| 牙克石市| 河津市| 镇江市| 泾源县| 呼图壁县| 庆城县| 彭泽县| 科技| 云梦县| 蛟河市| 克山县| 柘城县| 收藏| 南康市| 屏东县| 庆安县| 会昌县| 洛宁县| 信阳市| 青川县| 文山县| 府谷县| 乐至县| 潼关县| 长寿区| 铜鼓县| 龙里县| 沂南县| 红河县| 蒲城县| 涞源县| 昌黎县| 湘潭县| 滦平县| 靖江市| 利津县| 雷州市| 登封市| 垫江县| 渭南市| 攀枝花市| 古田县| 清徐县| 镇沅| 怀来县| 天等县| 石柱| 民和| 长乐市| 甘孜| 南宫市| 韶山市| 旺苍县| 凤冈县|