Western nations are scapegoating China for their own mistakes
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — When U.S. President Joe Biden met with America’s top allies at the
G-7 summit in England last week, the primary objective seemed to be to
signal-boost the appearance of unity against America’s geopolitical adversaries.
The primary bogeyman propped up for use as a rhetorical punching bag was China,
suggesting a pivot away from Russia as the designated global villain.
The G-7 nations — America, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan —
vowed “to coordinate a common strategy to deal with China non-market policies
that undermine competition,” Biden said in a press conference. He accused China
of “forced labor” and said there needs to be “a democratic alternative to the
Belt and Road Initiative.”
Perhaps a mirror would be helpful in determining where it all went wrong.
Maybe China wouldn’t be so powerful today if these same countries hadn’t spent
years ignoring — or even tacitly encouraging through inaction and faulty
policies — the outsourcing of Western manufacturing and jobs to China. Instead
of asking what could be done to improve the business climate in the West in
order to repatriate this lost productivity, these same governments seemed
content to turn a blind eye to the situation as long as it meant a healthy
profit margin for the business leaders at the top of the food chain.
Suddenly, China’s cheap labor is a human rights problem — long after it helped
make U.S. companies trillions of dollars in profit. At what point did Western
authorities have a crisis of conscience about China’s manufacturing labor cost
of $3.28 an hour? Apparently, now that there are countries with even cheaper
labor to exploit, it’s time to get tough on China.
Notice that the G-7 countries aren’t taking their ally India to task for a
manufacturing labor cost of $1.72 an hour. Nor do they have unkind words for one
of their regional allies against China, Vietnam, with its manufacturing labor
cost of $1.96 an hour. It seems as if this ultra-low-cost exploitative labor
would undermine markets even more than China does, but apparently we’re not
going to talk about it because U.S. industry has already pivoted to these
countries in a global race to pay people as little as possible for their work.
Instead, we’re going to hear a lot of selective outrage against the big economic
adversary that Western nations helped to create, and there won’t be any of the
deep soul-searching that would lead to an admission of how Western policies
contributed to this result.
The same feigned ignorance applies to China’s Belt and Road Initiative, cited by
Biden as a threat to Western economic interests. China began this project in
2013, when Biden was Barack Obama’s vice president, so perhaps Donald Trump was
on to something with the “Sleepy Joe” riffs if Biden is just waking up to it
now.
The Belt and Road Initiative is a plan to establish land and maritime routes
that would enable China to ship goods around the world in record time. It’s no
secret that one of China’s strategies is to rope certain countries into being
indebted to Chinese banks by loaning those countries money to build
infrastructure for the project. These nations are seduced by the promise of
sustained wealth from the route’s completion and the independence that such
riches would bring.
Montenegro is one example of this dream turned nightmare. The cash-strapped
country, struggling with a post-communist transition, signed on to the project,
took a $944 million loan from the Export-Import Bank of China and blew it on a
25-mile stretch of road leading to nowhere, according to an Agence France-Presse
report.
But China was only stepping into a void Western countries had left. Who else was
going to invest in needy Montenegro? Certainly not the European Union, which
didn’t seem to have an interest in loaning cash to a country marred by
corruption. Everything Western leaders have been doing has been based on
self-serving, short-term benefits, to the detriment of long-term strategy.
“We’re in a contest … with autocrats, autocratic governments around the world,
as to whether or not democracies can compete with them in a rapidly changing
21st century,” Biden said at the G-7 summit.
Yes, but successfully competing with autocratic governments would first require
Western nations to stop making choices that undermine their own potential for
success. The West’s primary adversary isn’t China or any other country — it’s
their own shortsightedness.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN