From Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Kuttner on TAP: The Bogus Corporate Counteroffensive Defending China
Date February 19, 2021 8:05 PM
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**FEBRUARY 19, 2021**

Kuttner on TAP

The Bogus Corporate Counteroffensive Defending China

****

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is out with an 88-page report
,
which has gotten respectful attention in the media, pointing out that
"full decoupling" of the U.S. from China would cost gazillions of
U.S. jobs and extensive corporate income in industries that run the
gamut from aircraft to medical devices to semiconductors.

The argument is a textbook case of the rhetorical device known as the
"straw man." Nobody is proposing a "full decoupling" in which the U.S.
breaks off all economic links.

What the U.S. is belatedly conducting, thanks to the Biden
administration, is a full strategic review of the U.S.-China
relationship. Where have we let supply chains become too dependent on
Beijing? Where are China's economic policies predatory? Where do we
need industrial policies of our own, both to recapture important
industries lost to China's mercantilist policies, and to target
emerging ones?

Obviously, we can and should reset the terms of U.S.-China commerce and
America's own domestic policies without breaking all links. The
members of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are not exactly disinterested
parties, nor do they come to this debate with clean hands.

American companies that produce in China for re-export to the U.S.
profit by taking advantage of China's near slave labor and filthy
environmental conditions, both of which would be illegal in the U.S.
Other U.S. companies that share critical technology as part of
carrot-and-stick commercial deals with Chinese "partners" are selling
out America's technical patrimony.

It's also rather incautious of the report to mention the threat to
semiconductors, of all industries. American manufacturers are now
suffering a shortage of semiconductors, because this is an epic case of
a sector that we allowed excessively to migrate offshore.

The Chamber's report is useful in one unintended respect. It's a
vivid reminder of why American governments have been so slow to reassess
our China relationship. The U.S. as a nation may be getting screwed, but
powerful U.S. corporations are getting rich.

~ ROBERT KUTTNER

Follow Robert Kuttner on Twitter

Robert Kuttner's latest book is
The Stakes: 2020 and the Survival of American Democracy
.

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