Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 25 February 2025
How Donald Trump could help make China's economy great again.
Donald Trump's return to the White House may have inspired Xi Jinping to bring Beijing's business leaders in from the cold. (Reuters)
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Amidst
the chaotic turbulence across the Northern Hemisphere in recent days,
outbursts from US President Donald Trump and the sudden arrival of
Chinese warships in the Tasman Sea, you could be forgiven for
overlooking a monumental U-turn in Beijing's vision for the future.
This
time last week, in the Great Hall of the People, President Xi Jinping
strode across the floor with a new-found sense of confidence as he
greeted an array of business leaders.
It
was a marked change from just four years ago, where many of those same
people were left quivering and fearful of what the future may hold,
including for their personal safety.
For
some, the spectacle conjured up visions of Trump's recent inauguration
where a gaggle of tech billionaires took centre stage.
"Now is the perfect time for private enterprises and entrepreneurs to thrive," Xi told the assembled throng.
All of them, he said, had "immense potential and promising prospects".
In
from the cold was Jack Ma, the Alibaba founder who largely has been
missing in action since 2020 after he launched a blistering tirade
against Beijing's regulatory regime, a speech that resulted in the
partial break-up of his organisation and a heavy-handed crackdown on
China's billionaires.
President Xi and Alibaba founder Jack Ma were seen shaking hands during the meeting. (Reuters: Florence Lo)
The intervening years haven't been kind to China.
Whacked
by COVID-19 and Beijing's regulatory overstep with its heavy-handed
lockdowns, its economy has laboured under the weight of a self-inflicted
property market meltdown that has stripped households of investment
wealth, slowed growth and caused sharp rise in unemployment,
particularly amongst the youth.
While
the West has struggled to rein in the first inflation outbreak in half a
century, China has battled to avoid a deflationary spiral that
threatened to cripple its economy.
That was reflected on its stock markets, which headed south into an ever-deepening winter.
Last
September, however, just as Donald Trump's campaign to return to the
White House began to gather momentum, China's fortunes turned, at least
on financial markets.
Faced
with the prospect of an old adversary in the White House, it hatched a
stimulus plan to encourage new investors that, after years of failure,
finally found some traction.
And
then, a month ago, China's race towards an Artificial Intelligence
future suddenly began threatening Wall Street's technology titans.
Who's on one?
Jack Ma may have been the symbolic face of Beijing's policy about face.
But the other cast members in this reconciliation were every bit as important.
In
addition to Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei and Tencent chief Pony Ma was
the new breed in China's global business hopefuls. Car company BYD's
chief Weng Chuanfu and AI sensation, DeepSeek boss Liang Wenfeng, also
were in attendance.
The
re-acceptance of leaders across such a broad range of industries is in
stark contrast to the business purges that began with real estate
tycoons five years ago that quickly moved on to technology, food
delivery and even education services.
At
the time, there was speculation that President Xi saw the emerging
billionaire class as a threat to Beijing's authority and civil order.
Exactly
what drove the sudden reunification is open to conjecture. But the
Trump administration's threat of wide-ranging trade penalties including
tariffs against China's already reeling economy and the turmoil in
global geopolitics are difficult to ignore.
Perhaps
too, was the stark realisation that China's moribund and hugely
indebted state owned enterprises are grossly inefficient and that the
focus needed to shift back to a more free enterprise system to generate
growth and employment.
Huawei
founder Ren Zhengfei, BYD boss Wang Chuanfu and New Hope founder Liu
Yonghao all attended the business leaders meeting last week. (Reuters: Florence Lo)
The new Pacific battleground
The
White House hasn't spared the criticism. Its most loyal allies,
including Canada and Europe have come under fire, and it has roundly
rejected Ukraine for having fought against an invading Russia all within
a little more than a month.
They were developments that would have been keenly watched in Beijing.
At
the very least, Washington has signalled a dramatic shift in its
relationship with long-standing partners and allies that will create
opportunities and challenges in diplomatic, trade and defence
arrangements far into the future.
Diminished are the links in culture, history and democratic values.
These
have been supplanted by transactional interests which, given our region
is dominated by Washington's great rival, makes our future far less
certain and stable than it has been for the past four decades.
Like
most other countries in the region, our economy is hugely dependent
upon trade with China both for export income and imports. But our
diplomatic and defence ties have been firmly linked to the US and the
western alliance.
For years,
People's Liberation Army ships have been engaging with vessels in the
South China Sea from neighbours Vietnam, the Philippines and Indonesia,
which have become more frequent as it ramps up territorial claims.
Vietnam
— which calls the region the East Sea — maintains the dispute is not
regional but global, given the amount of vital shipping that passes
through the area and is determined to thwart its neighbour's ambitions.
There
also have been numerous examples of People's Liberation Army aircraft
intercepting RAAF flights with dangerous mid-air manoeuvres, including
one just over a week ago.
But its live fire exercises in the Tasman Sea over the weekend,
while legal under international law, could only be interpreted as a
statement to Canberra and Wellington about the capability and reach of
China's navy and about where future allegiances may want to lie.
Subtle, it wasn't.
'Disconcerting': Richard Marles addresses China conducting live fire drills off NSW coast
Intelligence, artificial and otherwise
Is Donald Trump looking to bring China to the table or to send it packing?
Perhaps even he doesn't know.
What
we do know is that on Friday, he issued a new round of Executive Orders
that will block Chinese investment in American technology, food
supplies, farmland, minerals, natural resources, ports and shipping.
The
White House will also try to block money heading into Chinese military
and industrial development which, as Rabo Bank's global strategist
Michael Every notes, "given the latter's civil-military fusion policy
covers a lot — and this is just as Wall Street started to get bullish on
Chinese tech stocks."
Wall
Street knows no boundaries when it comes to earnings. And since
September last year, when China's markets found their footing, money has
been pouring in.
That only
accelerated after DeepSeek, the Chinese AI firm that managed to produce a
highly competitive product to ChatGPT at a fraction of the cost,
rattled the idea of American tech dominance and global superiority.
It
was achieved despite, or perhaps because of, a US imposed ban on the
all-important Nvidia chips that has driven Silicon Valley's $US450
billion a year splurge on AI.
While
there has been talk that DeepSeek has a secret stash of Nvidia chips,
others believe that the shortage in China prompted the Chinese company
to take a different path.
The
Hang Seng Index is now sitting at a three-year high as western money
shifts from overblown American tech stocks and into more modestly valued
Chinese firms.
That may be at an end. Or it all could change again next week.
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