Affichage des articles dont le libellé est National Trade Council. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est National Trade Council. Afficher tous les articles

jeudi 19 juillet 2018

Dr. Peter Navarro: "We have to defend ourselves"

Peter Navarro said that China is in a "zero-sum game" with the rest of the world when it comes to trade.
By Mike Calia

Dr. Peter Navarro, director of the National Trade Council.

Dr. Peter Navarro, one of President Donald Trump's top trade advisors, said Thursday that China is in a "zero-sum game" with the rest of the world when it comes to trade.
Dr. Navarro, who spoke to CNBC's Joe Kernen on "Squawk Box," is known for his pragmatic economic stances on China.
Under President Trump, the U.S. has engaged in a trade war with China, as both nations have issued and threatened billions of dollars of tariffs on each other's products.
"We have to defend ourselves," Dr. Navarro said, citing Chinese theft of U.S. intellectual property on technology. 
"They're attacking our crown jewels. They make no bones about it."
Recently, President Trump threatened to impose new tariffs on $200 billion of products from China as the U.S. pushes the country to take a harder line on protecting intellectual property. 
Larry Kudlow, President Trump's top economic advisor, said on Wednesday that Chinese dictator Xi Jinping was holding up progress and refusing to budge over his country's trade policies. 

samedi 18 février 2017

The Visionary Economist

Meet Mr. ‘Death by China,’ President Trump’s inside man on trade
By Steven Mufson 

Peter Navarro attends the "Death By China" screening at the Quad Cinema in New York City in August. He wrote, produced and directed the film.

If President Trump were to make a movie encapsulating his feelings about China, it might look a lot like this:
A red, white and blue ball with the word “jobs” appears on the screen. 
It rolls under the portrait of Mao Zedong through an animated Gate of Heavenly Peace, the iconic entrance in Beijing. 
There, where the ancient Forbidden City should be, belching smokestacks jut skyward.
Words then roll against a black background, saying that 57,000 American factories have disappeared since China joined the World Trade Organization and “began flooding American markets with illegally subsidized exports.” 
Next, a bread knife with the words “Made in China” is plunged into a map of the United States and animated blood runs out, trickling into the title: “Death by China.”
The movie actually exists, and it was written, produced and directed by Peter K. Navarro, a 67-year-old professor in the University of California at Irvine’s business school who is the head of the new White House National Trade Council
His task: to help rewrite the rules of global trade, from Mexico to China to Britain, and to bring back American manufacturing and jobs.
“The best jobs program is trade reform with China,” Navarro says in the movie, which is narrated by Martin Sheen, who starred in “Apocalypse Now” and as liberal hero President Josiah Bartlet in the TV series “West Wing.”
Mr Navarro has struck such a chord with Trump that he could end up playing an outsize role in the administration’s economic policy. 
The president’s announcement of his appointment called him “a visionary economist.”
“I read one of Peter’s books on America’s trade problems years ago and was impressed by the clarity of his arguments and thoroughness of his research,” Trump said in a statement. 
“He has presciently documented the harms inflicted by globalism on American workers, and laid out a path forward to restore our middle class.”

National Trade Council adviser Peter Navarro, right, and White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, center, wait for President Trump to sign three executive orders on his first Monday in office.

Putting nations on notice
Few of the people Trump has brought into the White House seem to be so in tune with the president. And for the moment at least, he has filled a policy vacuum by being visible while other Cabinet nominees struggle with confirmation.
Navarro has been one of just a handful of White House officials at Trump’s side for the signing of executive orders, such as withdrawing the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and blocking federal funds for groups that provide abortions or abortion counseling.
In early February he attended a White House meeting about trade that included Trump and the Hill’s “big four” — Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) and ranking Democrat Ron Wyden (Ore.), House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Tex.) and ranking Democrat Richard E. Neal (Mass.).
On Feb. 14 and 15, he briefed Senate Finance Committee members. 
According to people there, Navarro laid out principles — free and fair trade; bilateral deals, not multilateral ones; a reduced trade deficit; a strengthened defense industrial base; and automatic triggers for renegotiation when trade deficits occur.
Although he didn’t describe any mechanisms, Navarro also listed about a dozen more specific trade goals, including boosting the number of U.S. parts in imported finished goods; developing tools to punish currency ma­nipu­la­tion; cracking down on intellectual property theft that Navarro said cost $300 billion a year and “steals the seeds of innovation for the future”; and restricting heavily subsidized, state-owned ­enterprises.
He also said that World Trade Organization decisions had been “unfair” to the United States and that Chapter 19 of the North American Free Trade Agreement had allowed Canadian softwood lumber exporters to avoid duties. 
Navarro said that the Canadians “have played us.”
And like Trump, Navarro has put other countries on notice that the United States would confront its major trading partners even when they are close allies. 
In a ­Jan. 31 interview with the Financial Times, Navarro sent shock waves through Europe when he said that Germany was getting an unfair competitive advantage by manipulating the euro to lower its value and make its exports ­cheaper.
In 1996, Peter Navarro, then a Democrat, hoped that the backlash against the “Republican Revolution” led by House Speaker Newt Gingrich would sweep Democrats into office. Navarro used this flier in his unsuccessful campaign to unseat Rep. Brian Bilbray (R-Calif.).

‘The one that got away’
Navarro got his start in politics at the local level — as a Democrat. 
He ran unsuccessfully for mayor of San Diego in 1992, city council in 1993, county supervisor in 1994 and Congress in 1996.
“My citizen activism is a direct outgrowth of a classical and fiscally conservative training in economics at Harvard,” he wrote in “San Diego Confidential,” a revealing, cutting and readable memoir of his years in politics there. 
“It is a perspective rooted in one of the most important concepts in economics — the need for government intervention in the presence of a market failure.”
Initially he became active in a popular local group called Prevent Los Angelization Now (PLAN) opposing developers.
“A city should decide where it doesn’t want to develop,” he wrote, “saving at least some of the canyons and hillsides and wetlands from the bulldozer’s blade.”
But instead of running for county supervisor, a race he might have won, Navarro jumped into the San Diego mayor’s race. 
His opponent, Susan Golding, launched three negative ads and he responded with an ad attacking Golding, whose ex-husband was convicted of laundering illegal drug money. 
Ahead in the polls going into the last weekend of the race, Navarro attacked her again in a televised debate. 
In tears, she called the attacks on her family unfair; Navarro accused her of rehearsing the response and came off as dismissive. 
He lost.
Years later, he wrote that he still thought about “the one that got away.”
“He was almost the mayor,” said Larry Remer, a political consultant who worked on three of Navarro’s campaigns after that one. 
“He flubbed it, is what really ­happened.”
Remer said Navarro was a hard-working candidate who “realized the need to stay on a clear, concise message, a lot like ‘make America great again.’ Nothing could appeal to people in San Diego more than saying ‘not L.A.’ ”
But, he added, what undid Navarro as a candidate was his personality. 
“He would just burn through volunteers,” Remer said.
“He’s not quite as prickly as Trump, but he has the same ego issues.”
In 1996, Navarro took on then-U.S. Rep. Brian Bilbray (R-Calif.), hoping that the backlash to the Newt Gingrich revolution would sweep a Democrat into the House. 
He later wrote that Bilbray “was as much of an idiot as he was when he first ran” for Congress “but this time he was an idiot with a record — a bad one.” 
Nonetheless, heavily outspent, Navarro lost soundly.
Discouraged, divorced and in debt, he moved on.
In the mid-2000s, Navarro latched onto the issue of China’s growing global ambitions.

A ‘decent trade deal’
Navarro resurrected his public persona by turning to writing, doing a set of online basic economics books and a how-to investing book titled “If It’s Raining in Brazil, Buy Starbucks.”
In the mid-2000s Navarro latched onto the issue of China’s growing global ambitions, writing “The Coming China Wars,” “Death by China” and “Crouching Tiger; What China’s Militarism Means for the World.”
According to the New Yorker, Navarro in 2011 read that Trump told the Chinese state news agency Xinhua that he liked Navarro’s first book on China. 
They communicated after that but met in person only during the presidential campaign, when Navarro was one of the few economists to take Trump seriously.
At times, Navarro sounds moderate. 
“The last thing a Trump administration plans is a trade war,” he said at a Tax Policy Center event in October. 
“The issue simply is getting a decent trade deal with each of the major trading partners.”
And many of the issues he raises about China are real: Chinese companies steal intellectual property, receive cheap credit from Chinese banks, pay lower wages, and cough up more pollution and pay less for pollution controls. 
Navarro estimated in 2006 that unfair trade practices accounted for 41 percent of China’s competitive advantage over U.S. firms.
But the film, in which Navarro attempts to be toward China what Michael Moore is to the automobile industry, is hyperbolic in tone. 
It includes comments by AFL-CIO leader Richard L. Trumka, ordinary shoppers and Navarro himself, who fires salvos at American corporations that do business in China.
The narrator says that “no company has been happier” to move its capital offshore than General Electric. 
Then Navarro appears and interjects. 
“When I go out and do speeches to corporate audiences on China, they want me to talk about strategy,” he says. 
“It’s like, ‘Hey, you’re going over to China. You’re giving them your avionics so you can participate in a regional jet game in China, and two or three or five years from now you’re going to try to sell your regional jets in Europe — and your biggest competitor is going to be that China guy. How stupid is that?’ ”

Peter Navarro, a University of California at Irvine business professor and economist, seen in August, is one of President Trump’s most visible advisers on the economy.

Navarro’s toughest audience has been his fellow economists.
Now, as a key Trump adviser, Navarro has run into more flak.
In a paper he wrote last year with now-Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, Navarro said that Trump could impose tariffs and encourage changes in consumer buying habits to erase the huge U.S. trade deficit. 
That would go hand in hand with greater investment in the U.S. economy.
Navarro and Ross say that getting rid of the trade deficit and boosting investment would also spur faster economic growth, which would bring in $1.74 trillion in tax revenue over a decade.
But if the United States erects tariff barriers to China, factories might go to other lower-cost countries such as Vietnam, Bangladesh or India.
Furman said that “if you’re trying to intimidate companies about moving operations or yell at them over supply chains, that’s not the way to make America a more attractive place. The way to do that is to build infrastructure, train workers and invest in technology, not to just beat up on other ­countries.”
Navarro’s close relationship with Ross could serve him well when Cabinet members arrive and leadership on issues grows more fractured, potentially creating rivalries with more savvy infighters such as National Economic Council head Gary Cohn
Yet for now, Navarro and Ross appear to be in sync with the president and his threats on trade.
That position is one that Navarro has held for at least a decade. 
His “Death by China” film takes a video of Obama speaking in the White House briefing room and splices in a Chinese soldier who removes the White House insignia behind Obama and puts up a Chinese flag.
The film also shows an empty factory with broken windows and unemployment lines, and juxtaposes that with Chinese container ships and busy Chinese factory workers. 
In the end, the credits roll to the tune of a glum, folky song whose lyrics Navarro helped write.
“Look around, tell me what you see.
Every day more people in the street.
I used to work in a factory.
By now I’d work for anything
It’s not me, it’s my family I wish to feed.
Not much, we got simple needs.
Too bad they sent our jobs away.
In China they’re not workers, they’re just slaves.
People, wait, it’s a world of trade and greed.
And the CEOs get richer, and our jobs all move offshore.”
It could be an ode describing the plight of Trump’s supporters. 
And it struck a chord with one crucial viewer, who said in a blurb on the film’s Web page: “Death by China” is right on. This important documentary depicts our problem with China with facts, figures and insight. I urge you to see it.”
The reviewer: Donald Trump.

mardi 10 janvier 2017

Investing legend Jim Rogers: 'Forget China, buy Russia'

By Joshua Bateman

Jim Rogers

Renowned investor Jim Rogers has a contrarian message for U.S. investors on the prowl for opportunities in the wake of the Trump presidency: Buy Russia.
In his view, with U.S. equity indices realizing all-time highs, now is the time to look at undervalued markets around the world.
Rogers decades ago co-founded the Quantum Fund with George Soros.
Although Rogers acknowledges that the Trump effect has had "an impressive effect on the U.S. stock market," he says "many stocks are now expensive." 
Tax cuts, infrastructure spending and corporate cash repatriation should remain positive for U.S. markets over the next couple of years, but Rogers sees better opportunities internationally.
According to the investment guru, his bullish stance on Russia is based on his view that relations between the United States and Russia will improve when Donald J. Trump takes office as the 45th president of the United States, providing a boost to its depressed economy. 
There is also the chance that sanctions imposed on Russia over its role in the conflict in the Ukraine may be eased.
Rogers first visited Russia in 1966 and was pessimistic for almost five decades. 
"But something has happened in the Kremlin. They understand that they cannot be the same old czarist and communist plutocrats that they were," he said. 
Russia also has vast natural resources — it's the world's largest petroleum producer — and is not a significant debtor nation despite the fact its been mired in recession due to the oil price collapse and international sanctions. 
It has the 12th-largest economy, valued at $1.3 trillion, the IMF reports.
Rogers is long the ruble and Russian markets. 
"I was bullish on Russia before Trump came along with his positive comments," he said, noting that he has been investing heavily there over the last few years
"Trump is going to be friendly with Russia. That's an enormous change. You're going to see the rest of the world remove sanctions."

China is a big risk

In contrast, Rogers is not optimistic about investment prospects in China and is in a holding pattern, neither shorting nor buying assets.
He says Trump's hawkish stance on China will stall the country's economic growth engine. 
The president has threatened to slap huge tariffs on Chinese imports, which could trigger a trade war. 
"Trump seems to have it in for China. I don't know why, since he and his family do huge amounts of business in China," Rogers said.
On Jan. 2, Mr. Trump tweeted that "China has been taking out massive amounts of money & wealth from the U.S. in totally one-sided trade, but won't help with North Korea. Nice!"
Within days China's state news agency, Xinhua, retorted with a commentary, noting that such tweets are "undesirable."
"Guys that Trump has appointed do understand how the world works... They say that they need to attack China," Rogers said.
In December, Trump selected Peter Navarro, author of "Death by China: Confronting the Dragon," to head the National Trade Council, a new White House office. 
"Navarro has made a career out of attacking China. And Trump's going to obviously listen to him. And that can cause strife for a while," Rogers said.
In September 2016, Navarro co-authored a campaign white paper with Wilbur Ross, nominee for U.S. Commerce Secretary. 
They wrote that China's 2001 WTO inclusion "opened America's markets to a flood of illegally subsidized Chinese imports, thereby creating massive and chronic trade deficits. China's accession to the WTO also rapidly accelerated the offshoring of America's factories... China is hardly the only cheater in the world; it's just the biggest."
In an attempt to improve U.S. business competitiveness on the global stage, Trump has spoken of a 45 percent tariff on Chinese imports.
"If he does that, you better sell everything you have, because it will cause very, very serious problems," Rogers said.
"When you have trade wars, you have economic upheaval, turmoil, recessions [and] bankruptcy."
Through the first 10 months of 2016, the United States exported $92 billion worth of goods to China and imported $381 billion worth.
Because of this risk, Rogers said, "the U.S. dollar is going to continue going up against nearly every currency in the world."

A potential whiplash
A trade war would have ripple effects.
According to Rogers, China could reduce its $1.12 trillion of U.S. debt holdings by allowing the bonds to roll off as they mature.
Additionally, it could institute its own tariffs on U.S. imports, hurting industries such as agriculture.
In fiscal year 2016, the United States had an agricultural trade surplus with Greater China, exporting $26 billion worth of goods while importing only $4 billion.
Importing less from the United States would bolster the agricultural industries in both China and Russia.
Owing to these potential policy changes, Rogers is cautious.
"If Mr. Trump does what he says, Chinese equities certainly are not going to go up. No equities are going to go up if he does what he says he's going to do. So I'm sitting and watching," he said.
He is bullish on select sectors in China, however, including those that improve the environment and peoples' lives.
"The Chinese are now spending huge amounts of money cleaning up [the environment]. … Healthcare in China's a disaster. They're spending a lot of money to get better and more health care." As the country continues to develop, "parts of the Chinese economy are going to do extremely well no matter what happens to the world," he said.
The One Belt, One Road initiative valued at over $4 trillion is also creating investing opportunities. "It's rare in history that geography changes," Rogers said.
"The Chinese have this gigantic project, which is going to change world geography as we know it. Somebody's going to make a fortune."
Rogers said railroad suppliers will prosper, and correspondingly, he recently opened a trading account in Kazakhstan, which he said will benefit.
Rogers, who has lived in Singapore for nine years, said, "I don't think many people, if any in Washington, understand what's happening [in Asia]... They don't understand that Japan is in decline. They don't understand that North and South Korea will be merging soon..."
And as the United States' role in the region is reduced, as Trump has asserted, China's influence will rise.
Although Rogers is bearish on many asset classes over the short term, he is bullish on Asia over the next 10 or 20 years.
"If you look at the largest creditor nations in the world, they're all in Asia: Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, Singapore, even Russia. This is where the assets are. This is where the demographics are positive. This is where the energy is," he said.

dimanche 25 décembre 2016

Sina Delenda Est

Merry Xmas, Naughty China, Navarro Is Coming To Town
By Gordon G. Chang

Christmas came early to China and General Motors, with both getting coal in their stockings last week. 
The two unpleasant surprises are almost certainly related.
This long-running saga—it could last years—started Wednesday. 
Then, Trump’s Transition Team announced the creation of the National Trade Council
Peter Navarro, a University of California, Irvine economist, was picked to head up the new body.
The U.S. has for decades maintained help-China and free-trade policies, but it has not had an industrial one for a long time. 
Navarro, whose formal title will be Assistant to the President and Director of Trade and Industrial Policy, is being charged with developing a national plan to rebuild American industry.
“For the first time,” the Transition Team press release states, “there will be a council within the White House that puts American manufacturing and American workers first, and that thinks strategically about the health of America’s defense industrial base and the role of trade and manufacturing in national security.”
Navarro, Trump’s team said, “is a visionary economist.”
That label is certainly on the mark. 
Not everyone likes his vision, however.
Take the inhabitants of Beijing. 
As the Financial Times reported Thursday, Navarro’s appointment “shocked Chinese officials and scholars who had hoped that Mr. Trump would tone down his anti-Beijing rhetoric after assuming office.”
The assumption in the Chinese capital was that Trump would follow the pattern of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, who had all cooperated with China after campaigning against it. 
And in this particular case, the Chinese thought Trump would be the businessman “open to negotiating deals,” as Zhu Ning of TsinghuaUniversity put it. 
“But they have been surprised by his decision to appoint such a hawk to a key post.”
Navarro is not a hawk. 
He is the hawk, America’s pre-eminent China skeptic. 
Author of Death by China, the 67-year-old has led the charge against Chinese mercantilism and predation.
Beijing, sensing what was at risk, was quick to go on the offensive after the announcement of Navarro’s appointment. 
There were comments from the Ministry of Commerce and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
And the Chinese state propaganda apparatus went into overdrive, trotting out academics. 
“China is preparing itself for U.S. trade actions,” said Cui Fan of the China Society of WTO Studies to the FT. 
“China will respond with counteractions of its own.”
Cui’s timing was perfect. 
One day after the FT published his threat, the Shanghai Municipal Development and Reform Commission announced it had fined SAIC General Motors Corp., the joint venture of General Motors and Shanghai Automotive Industries Corp., 201 million yuan ($28.9 million) for monopolistic practices, specifically setting minimum prices for dealer sales of Cadillacs, Chevrolets, and Buicks.
“There is no clear evidence that the Shanghai GM fine is in retaliation for Navarro’s appointment or any comments by Trump,” the Detroit Free Press correctly noted.
Yet there are in Beijing few coincidences, so the betting is that the timing of the announcement is, as NBC News suggested, “an early shot over the bow” to the incoming president.
China’s enforcement action had been rumored for months, but the specific timing of the announcement makes the penalty look like a warning to Trump. 
Chinese media have made that connection.
The official China Daily, on the 14th of this month, issued an article reporting that Beijing would levy an antimonopoly fine against an American carmaker and then raised the retaliation issue by quoting Zhang Handong of the price supervision bureau of the National Development and Reform Commission. 
Zhang said there was nothing “improper” about the fine, but he looked defensive because his words, which appeared directed to the president, came right after the Global Times promised Trump that Beijing would retaliate should he start a trade war with China. 
The paper, a tabloid controlled by the authoritative People’s Daily, specifically threatened Boeing, Apple, and American soybean and maize farmers as well as U.S. educational institutions. 
U.S. auto sales in China, the Global Times promised, “will suffer a setback.”
GM’s minimum prices may constitute a violation of China’s antimonopoly rules, but the prosecution of the automaker’s joint venture is hideous. 
Beijing is busy recombining already large state enterprises back into formal monopolies, and Chinese regulators have disproportionally targeted foreign competitors in what is a patently discriminatory campaign.
Chinese officials may think that they can apply pressure on Trump—and by extension Navarro and Commerce Secretary pick Wilbur Ross—but they have a lot to learn about American politics in the post-Obama world.
Trump did not win on November 8 because he had the support of GM’s Mary Barra, Apple’s Tim Cook, or Boeing’s Dennis Muilenburg. 
He won because he promised to bring industry back to America and thereby got the votes of blue-collar America. 
Therefore, if Beijing continues to pressure American companies, Trump won’t feel the heat from executive suites. 
In fact, he will revel in the distress of CEOs—and he will get a boost as they have one more reason to leave China and return to the U.S.
American business is already in the process of rethinking that country, as the latest annual survey from the American Chamber of Commerce in China reveals. 
A quarter of respondents said they have either moved or were planning to move operations out of China, with some bringing capacity back to the U.S.
As CNBC reports, American businesses have in fact taken steps in that direction. 
Last month, for instance, Coca-Cola announced plans to sell its China bottling operations. McDonald’s wants to bail too.
“China is powerful enough to withstand pressures from the Trump government,” boasts a Global Times editorial. 
“If Washington dares to provoke China over its core interests, Beijing won’t fear setting up a showdown with the U.S., pressuring the latter to pay respect to China.”
With American business souring on that country, Chinese threats begin to seem hollow.
That’s one fewer reason for Trump, Ross, and Navarro to care what Beijing thinks.