charm offensive at beijing’s free will?
DESCRIPTION
Charm Offensive at Beijing’s Free Will?. Yang Jiang. 1809. Diplomatic Strategy. From: 韬光养晦 tao guang yang hui (hide the blade and accumulate strength) To: 与时俱进 yu shi ju jin (advance with time) ‘a responsible great power’. connotation. Yang Jiechi March 2008: - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Charm Offensive at
Beijing’s Free Will?
Yang Jiang
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1809
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Diplomatic Strategy
•From: 韬光养晦 tao guang yang hui (hide the blade and accumulate strength)
•To: 与时俱进 yu shi ju jin (advance with time)
•‘a responsible great power’
connotation• Yang Jiechi March 2008:
• to deepen strategic and political mutual trust between China and other countries, and to create a good environment and atmosphere for international economic cooperation;
• to propel multilateral and bilateral free trade cooperation and resolve economic disputes through dialogue;
• to support the realisation of important cooperation projects and to protect legal rights of overseas Chinese citizens and companies.
instruments
•bilateral trade agreements (FTA)
•(regional) financial cooperation
•outward investment
•resource diplomacy
•WTO
•foreign aid
FTAsStatus Countries / Regions
Proposed
Mercosur (South American Common Market),
Northeast Asia, Shanghai Cooperation
Council
Feasibility Study India, South Korea, Switzerland
Under negotiation
Chile on investment, Australia, Costa Rica,
the Gulf Cooperation Council, Iceland,
Norway, South Africa Customs Union.
Agreement on Trade in
GoodsChile
Agreement on Trade in Services Chile
‘Comprehensive’ agreement
ASEAN, New Zealand, Pakistan, Peru,
Singapore, Hong Kong, Macau
FTA Policy: Liberals vs. Protectionists
• Lack of imperative to enforce domestic reforms, in contrast to the WTO
• Liberals: MOFCOM, exporters
• Protectionist forces
• Agriculture: ‘Three Agricultural Problems’ and MOA
• Services and Investment: economic security, partial reform and monopoly profits
• NDRC (National Development and Reform Commission)
• Ethnic problems
• National People’s Congress
FTA policymaking: Politics and Economics
•Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM)
•Ministry of Foreign Affairs: ‘big country morality’ of ‘giving more and taking less’?
•The leadership
•Bureaucratic capacity and coordination
(regional) financial cooperation
• From response to responsibility?
•Asian Monetary Fund
•Chiang Mai Initiative: surveillance? A supra-national body?
•Exchange Rate Coordination...
• constrained by the exchange rate policy, a closed capital account and weaknesses in the banking system
IMF and World Bank
•Call for increased voting power for developing countries, for Asia--G20
•International Reserve Currency - Special Drawing Rights: ‘testing the water’
•Experimenting internationalization of RMB
•Issues:
• conditionality - Beijing Consensus/China Model?
• transparency
• call for a new international economic order?
outward investment
•2001 from restrictive to encouraging
•2004 more supportive measures
•2006 reflection on ‘neo-colonialism’
•2008 from caution to aggression
•now in the process of making a strategy...
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Outward Investment
• MFA: support, service, bridge
• SASAC: the great butler; unclear
• Dept. of Organization of the CCP: personnel
• NDRC: the small State Council; proposals
• MOFCOM: contracts
• SAFE: supportive
• banks: policy, commercial
• SOEs: central, local
Chinese company
MFA
foreign company
NDRC
MOFCOM
banksSAFE
SASAC
CCP
Climate Diplomacy?
•support for other developing countries: solar water heaters, bio-energy and nuclear? a green development fund?
•COP15
To be continued...
•State-business relations?
•A national strategy for economic diplomacy?
•Political and economic interests?
•China’s identity?