Illustrating the state of America’s supply chains, orders for US-made manufacturing equipment are at 1992 level
China’s exports rose 28% in September from the year-earlier level, more than the analyst consensus had forecast. More important is that China’s exports to the United States have risen by 31% since January 2018, when President Trump imposed tariffs on a wide range of US imports from China. At a seasonally adjusted annual rate, the US is buying $635 billion of Chinese goods, equal to a staggering 27% of US manufacturing Gross Domestic Product.
That’s the sort of import dependency economists associate with Third World countries dependent on former colonial powers. US exports to China during the past 12 months were only 30% of China’s exports to the US.
During the same period, China’s exports to South Korea rose by 50%, to Taiwan by 60%, and to Germany by 61%, but China imports almost as much from these three countries.
Demand for Chinese goods after the pandemic disruption has strained China’s production capacity, contributing to a power shortage that is now forcing cutbacks in key industries, including computer chips.
China came out of the COVID-19 epidemic faster than any other large industrial country, and suffered less disruption to its productive capacity. That explains part of the increase of Chinese exports to the US despite a 20% tariff on about half of all goods sold to America.
The poor condition of America’s supply chains is another part of the story. Orders to US manufacturers for manufacturing equipment, for example, languish at the level of 1992, at just half the 1999 peak.
The Trump corporate tax cut of 2018 reduced incentives to invest, cutting depreciation allowances for capital equipment in order to pay for a lower basic corporate tax rate. In response, US corporations in 2019 spent more money buying back their own stock than they did on capital expenditures, for the first time since the 2008 crash.
Another problem is the shrinkage of the active labor force. The US Labor Force Participation Rate (the percentage of the working-age population employed or seeking work) dropped sharply after the COVID-19 pandemic and has not recovered.
That explains why the Trump tariffs, continued by the Biden Administration, failed to reduce American dependence on Chinese manufacturing. America had no choice but to import more Chinese goods, and consumers simply paid more for them, contributing to inflation.
The Trump and Biden Administrations paid $5.8 trillion in COVID relief, equal to roughly a quarter of US GDP, and extended unemployment benefits, in effect paying large parts of the workforce to stay at home. This had the double effect of increasing demand for goods (especially the consumer electronics that the United States imports from China) while decreasing supply.
Lack of labor has worsened some critical bottlenecks, notably including transportation. The American Trucking Associations estimate that the US is short of 60,000 truckers.
Note on Data:
The data used in this analysis are published by China’s Customs General Administration. They were seasonally adjusted with the Census X-13 algorithm, using Eviews econometrics software. China’s data for exports to the US are higher than American data for imports from China, largely due to tariff-avoidance by US importers who buy Chinese goods that first were exported to a third country.
The Chinese data are more reliable than the US data, due to the practice of tariff avoidance through indirect routing of Chinese exports. As Federal Reserve economists Hunter Clark and Anna Wong explained in a June 2021 study published on the website of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors:
The United States’ bilateral goods trade deficit with China appeared to have narrowed substantially since the escalation of the U.S.-China trade conflict in 2018, or so US trade data suggest. By contrast, the Chinese data tell a much different story: The deficit, as implied by China’s bilateral surplus, nearly reached historical highs by the end of 2020.
Historically, the discrepancy between these trade balance figures had remained fairly predictable and stable. But with the onset of the trade conflict, US-reported import values from China have fallen more sharply than the China-reported export values to the United States. Two reasons are likely responsible for this phenomenon: (1) US importers underreporting Chinese imports in order to evade US tariffs, and (2) Chinese exporters reporting higher exports due to changes in tax incentives in China.
In this note, we find that the majority of the shift in discrepancy can be explained by the first factor, with an estimated $10 billion annual loss in US tariff revenues due to underreported US imports.
The Trump corporate tax cut of 2018 reduced incentives to invest, cutting depreciation allowances for capital equipment in order to pay for a lower basic corporate tax rate. In response, US corporations in 2019 spent more money buying back their own stock than they did on capital expenditures, for the first time since the 2008 crash.
Lol damn, I didn't know that. Amazing.
:freedom-and-democracy: I see it trickling, alright.
He's playing 4d chess. Comrade Trump is an accelerationist and wants to hasten the demise of the American empire. Trust the plan.
So this explains the influx of "Maybe China not so bad after all" articles on mainstream media in the last couple weeks.
China pwease buy ower debts uwu. We know we said we wanted to destroy you and make you west Taiwan but hey can't you see we were just joking? Here's we will post some articles about how your social credit score really isn't bad and how that whole Uighur thing wasn't rly as bad as we made it seem. Now pwease? Out ultra rich are running out of money to steal. We really need you to buy out debt so they can keep stealing more money from the working class. UwU
China’s exports to the United States have risen by 31% since January 2018
despite
despite a 20% tariff on about half of all goods sold to America.
It's hard to see what option the capitalists have to regain control of the situation other than a horrific last ditch war. I see zero other potential options and it scares the shit out of me.
Yeah, as funny as it is to see capitalists fuck themselves due to their own greed the looming threat of war to resolve the contradiction is worrying to say the least.
I'm trying to figure out what the specifics of this war would look like. Would the US just set up a huge naval base near Taipei and dare the CPC to do something about it? Other than that I have no clue how a war with China could be baited and feasibly won (aside from nuclear hellfire finally cleansing us all).
I think the only way to have the American public behind an outright hot war with China is something like this. And even then, not sure it would work. The American public was all in on the invasion of Iraq, but importantly that invasion was sold on being quick and painless and over with in a matter of weeks. Americans are bullies. They like the idea of picking on little guys. But they want nothing to do with someone who could actually punch back, like China. Personally I think a hot war won't happen any time soon and the CIA/State Dept will just focus on destabilization.
The thing with Trump tariffs is that no one knew how long they will be in place. Why invest billions in domestic manufacturing now, when the tariff could be dropped next week and your entire investment is suddenly worthless. If those tariffs were somehow made permanent and if tariff avoidance was somehow solved, then there might actually be an incentive to increase domestic manufacturing. But since NAFTA exists, most of that would be in Mexico anyway.
If those tariffs were somehow made permanent and if tariff avoidance was somehow solved
Neoliberals Try To Implement Protectionism Successfully After Dunking On It For the Last Century Challenge (good fucking luck, assholes)
If there is ever a war between China and the USA (a cold or hot one) like the chuds are predicting, China just has to stop sending treats and yanks would commit mass suicide.
I am looking forward to the treats discussions that are coming. Some great content.
Setting itself up as the manufacturing center of the world while still under communist control might single handedly be the greatest thing Deng ever did. But I need to read more of Deng tbh
Pretty sure David Graeber alludes to China's long history of making their rivals economically dependent upon them over long periods of time through favorable trade deals and "tribute" in Debt: The First 5,000 years. I've always wanted to look at the footnotes on that, if true thats some 200 iq shit
It's not so much that the Chinese are intelligent, you have intelligent people in all countries, it is more that China, partially liberated from the short-sighted tyranny of markets, is able to make and execute long-term plans. China has a serious plan for becoming a prosperous country and transforming to a socialist, then communist economy over the next century. Meanwhile whenever western countries makes even just small piecemeal plans one or two decades ahead, everybody knows that they are largely letters to Santa Claus that nobody takes serious and everybody will forget about in a few years' time.
Something, something delayed gratification and how capitalism sucks at this.
I'd like to read more about the stated very long term goals of China but all I can find are the five year plans. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
I posted https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-15-9833-3_4 for the above - there's no long term plan document but something that emerges from various CPC sources
You should read Origins of the Modern World by Robert Marks. It's an excellent survey asking the question "why is the majority of the world today divided into capitalist nation-states?" A large part of his thesis is that China (and to a lesser extent the different Indian kingdoms/empires) were the global economic hegemon until the 1800s. Before the century of humiliation China had silk and manufactured goods, India had textiles, and Indonesia had spices while Western Europe had basically nothing of value to export. So Western Europe started doing gunboat diplomacy to make themselves competitive. Examples of what Europe needed to do to compete with the east: colonize the Americas and export excess grain to feed the population beyond the natural limitations of Europe, forcefully dismantle the native Indian texttile industry, use thousands of Sepoys to invade China and force the opium trade on them.
Don't go in expecting dog whistles, he isn't an explicitely marxist historian as I recall. But he undoubtedly follows a materialist history and that makes it based by being factually correct.
As long as it's based in materialism it at least has a chance of being good, so Im gonna dig into his stuff for sure
This sounds like an excellent read. Thank you for the rec
Basically how the IMF operates, too. "Here's a big loan for infrastructure and oh hey now we get to write your domestic policy unless you want us to immediately call in all that debt and slap you with sanctions that render your new infrastructure worthless."
:wojak-nooo: How could you do this to me!
:deng-salute: I literally warned you up front.
:deng-drip: :deng-cowboy: :deng-smile: :deng-stoned: :denguin:
Some pretty incredible stuffing there. I haven't really seen the quantitative figures for PRC exports to the US, but that's pretty staggering
Gobbling exports
Please let me gobble your exports, daddy :panting:
I love how they blame inflation on American workers not wanting to be wage slaves and not the fact the fed has had the money printer on since 2008. Pumping loads of cash into corporations then cutting their taxes so they can continue to not play the labor force that keeps the economy afloat but instead take that money and run with it. lol
I love how they blame inflation on American workers not wanting to be wage slaves and not the fact the fed has had the money printer on since 2008.
30% Asset Inflation During a Downturn: i sleep
Retail prices rise 5% in the middle of a transportation bottleneck: REAL SHIT
I think about this a lot when we hear about how well the stock market has performed since shortly after the pandemic started. Recalling my undergrad econ classes, if inflation is 2% then the stock market also goes up 2%. Which of course means if real inflation is like 10%, if the market goes up 7% then the "real" stock market value actually went down 3%. But I guess no one on CNBC wants to talk about that...
Line go UP. UP is GOOD. It's basic economics you goddamn pinko.
I love the term pinko and wished conservatives and liberals still called us that.
:wojak-nooo: "You goddamn pinko commies want to destroy America with socialism!"
:yes-sicko: "Ha ha call me pinko again I kinda like that."
I think yesterday someone posted a paper that attempted to quantify unequal exchange, to determine how much countries benefit from/are exploited by imperialism. If I remember right the US had ~50% annual gdp growth come from unequal exchange. Many poor countries of course lost potential gdp growth as wealth was extracted. What’s crazy is that China, despite being the second largest economy, still lost ~10% gdp growth to trade. I wonder if this news has changed those numbers.
Here ya go
https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2021/09/30/iippe-2021-imperialism-china-and-finance/
cutting depreciation allowances for capital equipment in order to pay for a lower basic corporate tax rate.
What are depreciation allowances for capital equipment mean?
the amount of tax credit you get for equipment you invested in getting older