Business

American paranoia or prudence: Why block Chinese direct investment?

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This article is by Pete Sweeney, a Fulbright Scholar researching business policy in Chengdu, China.

The surge of investment developing countries are pouring into more developed economies is a phenomenon that is receiving increasing attention. According to Kofi Annan's preface to the 2005 United Nations Committee for Trade and Development (UNCTAD) World Investment Report:

The conventional wisdom of developed countries as capital and technology exporters and developing countries as importers is gradually giving way to a more complex set of relationships. The geography of international investment flows is changing. Developing countries are emerging as outward investors, and their importance as recipients of foreign direct investment in more knowledge-intensive activities is increasing.

Outbound investment from the People's Republic of China is part of this trend. A recent article in the China Daily claimed that outbound investment from the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and other developing nations is a "sign of a new world order." The claim sounds dramatic, but it is nevertheless indisputable. According to MOFCOM statistics compiled by Professor Lu Bo, Deputy Director of the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Co-operation (CAITEC), China has established about 10 thousand companies in 172 countries and regions with a total investment of $90.63 billion. Thanks to its attraction of inbound investment and its accumulation of foreign currency reserves, China is now one of the world's largest sources of investment. This naturally includes investments in developing countries. "Nearly half of US capital inflows over the past year and a quarter came from China, Brazil, Mexico, and Russia," the Xinhua News article claimed.

Indeed, during the recent global economic downturn, driven by the subprime mortgage crisis in the United States, Chinese firms have emerged to inject cash into troubled firms like Morgan Stanley and Citigroup. Michael Heise, writing for the International Herald Tribune, called these firms "white knights from afar." "Is [this] something to fear?" asks Heise. "The answer is no, at least, not directly." If the Chinese Ministry of Commerce has its way, we are likely to see more of such Chinese knights in the near future. A recent article on the Chinese Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT) website quoted Fu Zi Ying, Vice Minister of the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM), who argued that the current economic crisis offered Chinese firms unprecedented M&A opportunities. "Several well-known enterprises and research organizations have fallen into difficult positions. This offers Chinese firms a great acquisition opportunity. These [Western] firms possess well-known brands, formidable international sales networks, and relatively strong research capabilities. If our firms can successfully acquire them, we can use these resources to greatly enhance Chinese firms' international competitiveness."

In the current political climate, however, Chinese firms still face obstacles investing in developed economies, particularly when it comes to taking control of US firms. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) recently blocked an attempt by Huawei, a well-known Chinese telecommunications firm, from acquiring a $2.2bn stake in the US firm 3com, citing security concerns related to 3com's technology assets. Huawei is hardly the first Chinese firm to run into a wall when it comes to acquiring controlling stakes in US firms. The Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) attempted to acquire Unocal and was rebuffed due to security concerns. While not subject to a security review, Haier's attempt to acquire Maytag was politically unpopular in the US and was ultimately stymied.

Predictably, the Chinese are irritated and blame US protectionism and paranoia. Opinion in the US varies according to the speaker's assessment of Chinese intentions. In short, a lot of political sound and fury. What does it signify?

First, much of the popular fear of Chinese investment in the US is hysterical, reminiscent of the widespread fear that swept through the US when Japanese firms began buying up US assets, or more recently the Dubai port acquisition controversy. This is largely due to a poor understanding of the purpose of international direct investment, which can vary from deal to deal, and how it can affect national interests. The most dangerous canard is that foreign firms are more likely to destroy jobs when they acquire American firms than American firms are.

Indeed, what is the national interest when it comes to foreign direct investment? For example, the logic supporting the acquisition of Unocal deal (and the blockage of same) rested on the premise that oil is not, in fact, a fungible market product for sale anywhere to anyone, but rather a strategic resource that should be physically controlled by the nation. Therefore if China acquires an American oil firm, it can turn off US oil at the tap. But since most of Chinese oil currently passes through the Straits of Malacca under the eyes of the US Pacific Fleet, China's control of Unocal would hardly allow it to dictate terms of oil supply to the US. In short, if either the US government or the Chinese trusted the oil market to function, there would be little point to the acquisition from a national strategic perspective.

Huawei, on the other hand, is more complicated. For starters, Huawei's original foray into the US resulted in a large lawsuit. Cisco alleged that Huawei's router products were made from pirated Cisco technology. While a confidential settlement was reached between the firms, Cisco did not formally close the case, presumably to retain leverage. Huawei went on to establish US affiliates and research centers in the US, but its business performance in the US market has been less-than-spectacular. Even Lenovo's successful acquisition of IBM's laptop unit's performance in the US has been spotty; most of Lenovo's growth remains in Asia.

Nevertheless, many Chinese find these investment barriers insulting, unfair, and counterproductive. One article in the Guangzhou Daily argued that not only are such barriers unfair, but if the US wants to resolve the trade surplus, it should encourage Chinese firms to export capital to the US in the form of direct investment as a counterbalance. Other Chinese economists make arguments that such investment can help tame China's inflation problem caused by the renminbi glut. In order for such investment to make an impact on the enormous trade surplus, its scope would have to be amplified geometrically, but nevertheless.

However, it's unwise to mix conversations about trade with conversations about direct investment. Trade is the movement of goods, direct investment (as opposed to portfolio investment, which is the simple purchase of stocks and bonds) is the movement of management control. The latter is far more complex than the former and requires market similarity, not complementarity. This is why the bulk of direct investment flows are between the US and Europe, not the US and developing economies. The learning curve is much shorter for European managers, who operate in a similar legal and business environment as their American counterparts (not to mention language ability), than it is for Chinese managers.

If China wants to export capital for macroeconomic reason, it can do so simply by investing in bonds, as indeed it is already doing, or by letting the renminbi float, as is already underway. But direct investment should be a microeconomic firm-level decision, not a facet of macroeconomic strategy.

In the short run, Chinese direct investment's impact in the US should not be overestimated. It makes up a relatively low portion of China's GDP, even in comparison with other developing countries like India, and the average transaction amount is small, less than $5 million according to CCPIT. China, in short, invests less than it probably should, and despite aggressive moves like the Unocal bid, most Chinese investors are quite cautious about direct investment.

In the long term, however, Chinese direct investment in the western countries should be ultimately provide a net benefit to both parties, provided it creates value, local jobs, and avoids sensitive sectors. From the Chinese perspective, acquiring foreign experience (and training staff) is key to developing the competitive capacity they need to move up the value chain and pull the millions of impoverished Chinese trapped in dead-end manufacturing jobs along with them. As importantly, China needs to provide more jobs for its college graduates, among whom the unemployment rate (around 40%) is unsustainably high and is a long-term security problem for everyone.

From the foreign perspective, closer and healthier linkages with Chinese firms would not only facilitate business operations along the supply chain, it would provide greater legal leverage in conflicts of interest. As the recent controversy over quality control illustrate, it is quite difficult to gain recompense from Chinese firms that have no foreign assets to seize. As Chinese firms internationalize their operations, they become more accountable to international norms, as the Huawei-Cisco case illustrates.

However, reforms on both sides are necessary. Many American policies towards China are, in fact, discriminatory, particularly those directed towards protecting US agriculture and textile sectors, and many of the US security concerns regarding China are paranoid. At the same time, China's reliance on SOEs to drive direct investment is problematic as it is difficult to ascertain whether an SOE's acquisition strategy is driven by the profit motive or by political strategy. Therefore it is in everyone's interests that private Chinese firms, as opposed to state behemoths, be allowed to lead outbound direct investment overseas. This means giving them better access to capital from Chinese banks, and removing barriers in the US that stifle Chinese competition in sectors in which they enjoy the greatest comparative advantage. For example, part of the reason Chinese manufacturing is so cheap is they have near unlimited access to a Chinese peasantry that cannot survive on their farm incomes. Were the US and Europe to open their agriculture markets, the result would drive up the price of manufacturing labor in China as peasants return to an economically-viable agriculture sector.

China must also stop encouraging domestic firms to invest abroad for non-business reasons. Obviously national pride is a poor reason to invest, as is national security, neither of which are the responsibility of the business sector. There are also other policies that have perverse effects. For example, the Chinese tax structure currently gives preferential treatment to foreign-invested firms. This encourages a phenomenon called "round-trip" investment, in which a mainland firm creates a foreign affiliate abroad whose sole purpose is to return to China as a foreign firm. This means lowering domestic firms' tax treatment to the same rate as foreign firms, and at the same time equalizing the regulatory treatment of foreign firms (who already operate under an information and "guanxi" deficit) so that everyone plays on a level field. In short, increasing the depth and quality of investment flows in both directions can only serve to harmonize both nations' national interests.

 
There are currently 14 Comments for American paranoia or prudence: Why block Chinese direct investment?.

Comments on American paranoia or prudence: Why block Chinese direct investment?

From what I understand, American firms would never be able to acquire firms like Unilocal or 3Com in China. They would both fall under those protected industries (natural resources, communication) that the government refuses to privatize.
Also, hasn't the Chinese government already pushed up the tax rate for foreign-invested companies to 35% making it the same as for Chinese firms? I'm not sure, just asking.

In a market economy, governments will legislate and regulate assuming that market forces - economics - will drive the policies. And you expect the penalties prescribed in the legislation are good deterrents. When large corporations are not driven solely by market forces, and common corporate citizenship considerations, such as foreign government owned corporations, it makes governing a lot more difficult. And with the principles of these corporations offshore, and under protection from a foreign government, you cannot effectively enforce your penalties.

Allowing foreign state owned enterprises, in whatever disguise, as major player in your economy is a bad idea, whether it is in China or US or EU.

For the US to control oil supply by utilizing the Pacific Fleet would be tantamount to an act of war: a situation the US would tend to want to avoid at *almost* all costs. US military control is essentially non-existent until, well, business gets continued "by other means".

And continuation by other means usually demands a great deal of oil. It's pointless to control the Straits when China doesn't actually send any ships through.

I wouldn't call this specific security concern "paranoid". Certainly many other concerns are indeed paranoid, but what about the others?

As long as SOE's in China don't play by the WTO rules, what country is going to allow them to operate ... oh wait. Zimbabwe.

Nice article!

Regarding the new tax rate, yes, on paper the Chinese government has equalized tax treatment, and in the long run this may be implemented in reality. For now, however, there are still so many loopholes for foreign firms, and many of the local governments are still seeking to attract inward investment since it is part of their political incentive structure. While they cannot reduce tax rates for foreign firms by fiat, they can offer significant rebates and other incentives to reduce the effective tax rate enjoyed by foreign firms. However, I should admit that this "round-trip" investment phenomenon has been countered by recent aggressive policy measures, and therefore its significance should be continuously reevaluated.

Regarding oil security, yes, closing off the Malacca Straits would be construed as an act of war. However, the argument for direct control of strategic assets- as opposed to simply purchasing same on the global market- rests on a military premise. Chinese investment in oil, therefore, suffers from a contradiction. If one assumes there will be no war with the US, then there is no security reason to attempt to directly control oil fields. If, on the other hand, China fears that the US will monopolize oil supply in the event of such a conflict, China must face the fact that her navy is not, at present, capable of maintaining her oil supply, regardless of how her energy investments in Africa etc. are structured.

"Why block Chinese direct investment?"

Since Mrs. Slaughter works for a bank I can say with accuracy that the majority of people with wealth that she deals with do not have accurate records of their finances. Assuming the bank at which she is employed is a wholesome sampling of a typical bank here then I would say that because of that giant burden of proof as to how the money was acquired would be a good answer to your question.

Most Chinese can go to America and set-up shop as they wish. How many Americans can do that here without first creating a joint venture with a native here in China? Why don't you write an article about that? Don't hate America because its beautiful.

pete - maybe you should also write about the many loopholes that exist for chinese companies not to pay tax? or how difficult it is for foreign companies to invest in a great swathe of Chinese firms (media, oil and gas to name a few)? Or does that not fit into your neat agenda?

Well, first, my argument is not that foreign firms face no obstacles investing in China- investing in foreign countries is difficult for everyone- but clearly a quick look at the numbers indicates that whatever obstacles they face, they have not prevented a great deal of foreign firms, particularly American firms, from making a great deal of money in China, in joint ventures or otherwise. Yes, there are a few protected sectors, including the media. But what's surprising is what's not protected: aviation, for one.

Second, I would argue the most harmful barriers the US puts up against Chinese firms are not against investment, but rather export barriers protecting agriculture and textiles. These prevent China from competing in the areas where she enjoys comparative advantage, helping to keep down the income of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers in order to protect a vanishingly small population of American farmer poster families, and the massive, entrenched agribusiness lobby that prints the posters.

"These prevent China from competing in the areas where she enjoys comparative advantage, helping to keep down the income of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers in order to protect a vanishingly small population of American farmer poster families"---PETE

Don't F with my people. We have every right to sell our Chicken and Pig feet to whomever we choose. All of China's farming community is subsidized. On top of that where do you get your statistics. American farming is thriving---especially with these ridiculous ideas of bio-fuels. My family eats because we work hard and many Americans also eat because my family works hard. Chinese farmers are doing fine compared to last year, 5 years ago, and certainly 30 years ago. Their lives have improved 10,000-fold compared to us struggling U.S. farmers.

To: SGT. SLAUGHTER

"Most Chinese can go to America and set-up shop as they wish. How many Americans can do that here without first creating a joint venture with a native here in China?"

The fact is actually quite the opposite. While American looks quite free to you, it actually has one of the toughest visa/immigration policy among developed countries against developing countries. So very few Chinese can come to America to set up shop as they wish. That obviously is necessary to protect America from being swamped by people from developing countries. The opposite side --- pretty much any American can go to China to setup a shop is true. People from developed countries are generally better educated and more skilled, so making it easy form them to come in makes sense.

Your point about joint venture is valid. China is very easy to go in, but once you are in, there are obstacles like joint ventures, etc; U.S. is very difficult to go in for people from developing countries. Once you are in it takes years (5 to 10 years is not uncommon) to settle the immigration status (green card), once people get that settled, there will be virtually no obstacles.

"All of China's farming community is subsidized."

No, it isn't. In fact, until Reform and Opening, the Chinese government held food prices down to ensure a supply of cheap food to industrial workers in the city. Chinese farmers are some of the poorest in the world for good reason: bad policy. Without insulting individual US farmers, they only make up 2% of the US population. Yes, their economic situation is deteriorating, because they can't compete with heavily-subsidized agribusiness. There's a reason Coke costs as much as bottled water: subsidized high-fructose corn syrup. There is no comparison between the amount of supoort China gives to its agribusinesses and the amount the US spends (over $8bn in 2004) propping up an agricultural sector than employs only 2% of the population.

On top of that where do you get your statistics. American farming is thriving---especially with these ridiculous ideas of bio-fuels. My family eats because we work hard and many Americans also eat because my family works hard.

Americans eat American food because the price of that food is supported by heavy government subsidies. This is what the WTOs Doha round is all about. Developed economies spend more money on agriculture subsidies than we do on foreign aid. And that doesn't include the massive amount of federal aid required to irrigate regions in the American west that would be deserts without dams etc.

"Chinese farmers are doing fine compared to last year, 5 years ago, and certainly 30 years ago. Their lives have improved 10,000-fold compared to us struggling U.S. farmers."

Chinese farmers are fleeing the land as quickly as they can; the only thing holding them to farming is that fact that they aren't permitted to move into the cities. They prefer living in sheds and working in sweatshops to farming. Why? In 2001 the average wage of a Chinese farmer was less than $300, and it hasn't been increasing at the same rate as inflation.

The other aspect is all the US dollars that China has unwillingly accumulated funding the continuing, ballooning US current account (trade) deficit. If the US gets picky about where China is 'permitted' to invest those dollars AND threatens to get in a snit if China dares to sell them off cheap, what's China meant to do?

In China, getting a business licence is impossible even for regular Chinese people. Any Chinese person may license in the US.

Protectionism is firmly grounded in China. So I would not try to paint the US the same way.

The market is stringently controlled, what gets produced, where, in what way, what level of profits you can earn until the government moves in and especially what goods can be sold to whome at what price is tightly controlled.

Have our US leaders helped us forget that China's economy is Communist in structure?

Little Mark from somewhere in big China.

Non-Chinese firms also find PRC "investment barriers insulting, unfair, and counterproductive", not to mention corrupt and outright thuggish.

A long way to go before there is any kind of equivalence between European/US and Chinese FDI practices.

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