WEAPONS OF MASS PRODUCTION AND OTHER TALES By Morgen Witzel
Friday, December 01, 2006
For some American policymakers and commentators, China is replacing Islamic extremism as the bogeyman under the bed. China's uninterrupted growth now poses a threat to American interests. Its global economic expansion, as they see it, must be stopped.
One such commentator is Peter Navarro of the University of California, Irvine, a well-known analyst and commentator in the American broadcast media. He believes that China is conducting “an aggressive drive for global economic hegemony” and in The Coming China Wars urges America to do all it can to halt the country's forward march.
Measures should include direct economic confrontation with China including sanctions and border controls – backed up, if necessary, by military action.
Having set out this remarkable thesis, Prof Navarro lists the potential flashpoints that could lead to conflicts between China and other nations, especially the US. These include the flow of cheap manufactured goods that have come to dominate many world markets, which he dubs the “weapon of mass production”. The now familiar story of counterfeiting and piracy is also trotted out, along with environmental pollution, the growing Chinese demand for sources of energy and its internal social problems.
What is new – and sinister – is how Prof Navarro weaves these into his theme. In every single case, the Chinese government is directly or indirectly responsible for the problem. In every single case, the problem is linked to China's attempt to achieve world economic domination.
For example, Navarro believes that piracy and counterfeiting are tacitly supported by the Chinese government. Referring to “China's buccaneer nation”, he quotes a senior executive from an American pharmaceutical company who says: “Let's be practical here. It won't get much better until China has its own intellectual property to protect.”
Thus is reinforced the lie that China produces no innovations of its own but merely scavenges off the west. The idea that the country that invented gunpowder, paper and ketchup, among other things, has no intellectual property of its own is laughable but Navarro asserts it as “fact”.
He is critical too of the urbanisation of China, seeing it as deliberate policy to ensure a supply of cheap labour for the “WMP”. But urbanisation is a hallmark of a developing economy. China's share of GDP derived from agriculture is comparable to that of medieval Britain: 39 per cent for the former in 2003, 44 per cent for the latter in 1300. That must change. Migration to the cities is a natural, if painful, part of growth. This point is ignored.
The obscurations go on, but it is the chapter on drugs that really sets the tone. “No single country plays more of a key role than China in the global production, transportation and distribution of . . . illegal hard drugs,” he writes, adding a long list of scary statistics to prove his point. He does not blame the Chinese government directly – but any reader who wishes is free to make the inference that the government of China is indirectly, if not directly, responsible.
The policy prescriptions offered for averting this “threat” are both absurd and chilling. He advocates stripping China of its veto position on the UN Security Council on the grounds of its “immoral and opportunistic use of its UN veto as a diplomatic shield for all manners of outrage”. This would have the added benefit of humiliating China.
Meanwhile, drug trafficking, pollution and piracy are to be combated through tighter border controls and sanctions against companies involved in them.
He warns American consumers of “the real and dangerous hidden costs that are embedded in the purchase of cheap Chinese goods”. But even if American consumers stopped buying them, how would this help the US economy? They would buy equally low-priced goods from other sources.
Then comes the moment when hair stands up on the back of the neck. “What virtually all these policy prescriptions share . . . is that they require the economic and political will to stand up to China along with the military might to back up the prescriptions.”
The author offers no credible evidence to support the thesis of an aggressive Chinese quest for domination. When he discusses China's difficult internal social problems, he goes a long way towards contradicting it.
To suggest that China is engaged in “an aggressive drive for global economic hegemony” is nonsense. To assert that the US must respond with economic confrontation backed up by the threat of war is, to borrow a phrase from Jeremy Bentham, nonsense on stilts.