Look to Beijing

By Zachary Karabell

Sunday, March 29, 2009

A hundred years ago, London would have made sense as the spot where the world's leaders should gather, as they will this week, to grapple with a spreading economic crisis. The city was the early 20th century's nexus of finance and power, and Britain straddled the globe as the only true superpower.

But we're in the 21st century now, and the G20 heads of state should not be plotting in the shadow of Big Ben. They should be sitting across from Mao's Tomb, near the Forbidden City, in the meeting halls off Tiananmen Square in Beijing.

The first G20 meeting, last fall, appropriately took place in Washington. But holding this second conclave in Beijing would have signalled a clear recognition that the Washington-Beijing axis is the most important relationship in the world today; it is the X factor in the quest to rescue the global economy.

Can they do it?

Some look at the relationship and see only complications, worrying that if China sells off or stops buying U.S. bonds, the American economy could sink even deeper, leaving us like England at the end of War World II, a broke and broken hegemon, dependent on an upstart power.

The United States is no longer as rich as it acts. Former national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski has remarked that the world should focus less on the G20 and more on a "G2" of China and the United States.

In 2008, before the storm hit, China and the United States accounted for more than half of all global economic growth. This year, even in a worst-case scenario, China will probably grow 7 percent as the world economy contracts and the United States suffers through at least two more quarters of deep recession.

At the end of last year, John Lipsky, the deputy director of the International Monetary Fund, predicted that emerging economies would provide 100 percent of the world's growth in 2009. Given that China is the linchpin of the emerging world, it could well account for much of global growth now, much as the United States did in its mid-20th century heyday.

China has announced a $600 billion spending plan, which, relative to the size of its economy, surpasses Washington's. Still, these measures contrast with the tepidness of European spending efforts and dwarf the means of other nations.

America's political class, long accustomed to military and economic predominance, tends to view any reliance on a foreign power as a sign of weakness. In its annual report to Congress last week, the Pentagon said that China is seeking technology and weapons to counter the traditional advantages of U.S. forces.

Premier Wen Jiabao blamed the United States for the financial crisis in January, and just last week China's top central banker suggested replacing the dollar as the world's reserve currency with one that the IMF would issue.

China has become the world's second largest economy in a few short years. The U.S. economy is no longer self-sufficient, nor can the United States act unilaterally in matters of money. That does mean a relative decline in influence, a development Washington considers undesirable and dangerous.

Chinese officials are rightly nervous that, having invested so much -- politically and financially -- in the United States, they will be held accountable if the relationship turns sour or if U.S. economic weakness exacerbates problems within China itself. At a news conference on March 13, Wen went so far as to ask Washington for assurances that China's holdings of roughly $1 trillion in U.S. government debt will be safe.

Washington cannot halt Beijing's rise, nor can it extricate itself from this relationship. We can embrace it and shape it -- or we can reject it, and then all that debt and all that historical distrust may haunt us. We have a choice, and at least for the moment, we seem to be making the right one.

Zachary Karabell is president of River Twice Research and author of the forthcoming book, "In the Red: How China and America Became One Superpower Economy."
 
We should insitute massive protectionist measures against china's slave goods. And grow our domestic capacity in doing so. China is just a blip in history, to be discarded, as humanity rejects totalitarianism.
 
Both the EU and the US have more wealth per capita than China, and more total wealth. The axis would be more like US-EU-China, with China as the weakest end.
 
Both the EU and the US have more wealth per capita than China, and more total wealth. The axis would be more like US-EU-China, with China as the weakest end.


Is that wealth in USD? Our leaders are destroying the dollar as we speak. But oh, that's right, you don't understand inflation. Carry on.
 
Your new administration will never offend China.

As to your ignorant assertion that China is a "blip" in history, consider these facts:

China, one of the world's most ancient civilizations, has a recorded history of nearly 4,000 years.

Chinese had mastered the technology of smelting bronze approximately 5,000 years ago and iron tools came into use during the Shang Dynasty, 3,000 years ago. White pottery and glazed pottery were produced. Silk production was considerably developed and the world's first figured inlaid silk weaving technique appeared.

The Silk Road brought the constant exchanges between the East and the primitive cultures of the west. Chinese textile products, papermaking technique and some art crafts were introduced to the west through the route.

You plainly do not know that Chinese invented the compass, movable type, gunpowder, or that Chinese philosophy has a history of several thousand years; its origins are traced back to the Yi Jing.

The very land you inhabit was "discovered" and then stolen by colonialist imperialist racists seeking a way to reach the fabulous riches and wisdom of China by sea.
 
Don't be so quick to dismiss India either. They're posting yearly growth rates comparable to China and they have more economic freedom. It's quite likely that in 10-20 years they will have a larger economy than the whole of the EU.
 
Most Chinese do not share the fixation on personal income that has brought capitalism to it's knees.

As a nation, we enjoy 8% growth while America falls into depression.

The government has halted the yuan’s gains against the dollar and plans to cut export taxes to zero to protect our trade surplus.
 
Is that wealth in USD? Our leaders are destroying the dollar as we speak. But oh, that's right, you don't understand inflation. Carry on.

LOL. Inflation doesn't hurt total wealth. Every individual US dollar may be worth less but we have more of them. The exchange rate between the US and China has not changed significantly.
 
Your new administration will never offend China.

As to your ignorant assertion that China is a "blip" in history, consider these facts:

China, one of the world's most ancient civilizations, has a recorded history of nearly 4,000 years.

Chinese had mastered the technology of smelting bronze approximately 5,000 years ago and iron tools came into use during the Shang Dynasty, 3,000 years ago. White pottery and glazed pottery were produced. Silk production was considerably developed and the world's first figured inlaid silk weaving technique appeared.

The Silk Road brought the constant exchanges between the East and the primitive cultures of the west. Chinese textile products, papermaking technique and some art crafts were introduced to the west through the route.

You plainly do not know that Chinese invented the compass, movable type, gunpowder, or that Chinese philosophy has a history of several thousand years; its origins are traced back to the Yi Jing.

The very land you inhabit was "discovered" and then stolen by colonialist imperialist racists seeking a way to reach the fabulous riches and wisdom of China by sea.

Egypt has a recorded history of about 7000 years (to 5000 BC), but I don't hear too much about it these days...
 
LOL. Inflation doesn't hurt total wealth. Every individual US dollar may be worth less but we have more of them. The exchange rate between the US and China has not changed significantly.

Bankers have more of them. Most people do not have inflation adjusted savings account, moron. LOL. You're an idiot.
 
Most Chinese do not share the fixation on personal income that has brought capitalism to it's knees.

As a nation, we enjoy 8% growth while America falls into depression.

8% growth from 6000 dollars per capita. You guys are basically entering the industrial revolution a century late.
 
Fiat currency and bizarre security products has brought capitalism to it's knees. It's not the fault of personal income. That's retarded.
 
Don't be so quick to dismiss India either. They're posting yearly growth rates comparable to China and they have more economic freedom. It's quite likely that in 10-20 years they will have a larger economy than the whole of the EU.

If the EU can stave off a fall then the future is definitely looking to be an EU-US vs. India vs. China axis. That'll take about 50 years. And, again, these are all rough predictions.
 
If the EU can stave off a fall then the future is definitely looking to be an EU-US vs. India vs. China axis. That'll take about 50 years. And, again, these are all rough predictions.

50 year predictions from someone who doesn't understand inflation? Wow. Less than worthless.
 
Yet Egypt of the Phraoahs has enriched mankind forever with papyrus; America has brought the world foolishness such as American Idol and blue jeans.

Most of the accomplishments Americans claim were actually the product of other cultures.

Our national wealth culture and power are unrivalled. USA is a mongrel nation with no deep cultural history and after barely 200 years of existence has already defeated by small groups of guerilla fighters three times.

USA no longer has the power to accomplish what great nations must, if it ever did. The loss of your false sense of superiority may take some time to accept. Look at the British.
 
The strength of the Western Tradition has been it's unleashing of the individual, instead of the suppression of individuals under all the old world tyrannies.

Your hive like tyranny has only been given favoritism by New World ORder zealots. Your attitude of tyranny is nothing new, and it's quite retrograde.
 
Yet Egypt of the Phraoahs has enriched mankind forever with papyrus; America has brought the world foolishness such as American Idol and blue jeans.

Most of the accomplishments Americans claim were actually the product of other cultures.

Our national wealth culture and power are unrivalled. USA is a mongrel nation with no deep cultural history and after barely 200 years of existence has already defeated by small groups of guerilla fighters three times.

USA no longer has the power to accomplish what great nations must, if it ever did. The loss of your false sense of superiority may take some time to accept. Look at the British.
Papyrus was very good. So were the printing press and monotheism. The US Constitution has been a bit influential in modern times, how long?
 
Back
Top