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China in the World Economy

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Title: China in the World Economy


1
China in the World Economy
  • Tim Wright
  • University of Sheffield

2
Introduction
  • Question
  • Was China harmed by its involvement with foreign
    trade and investment in the 19th and early 20th
    Century?

3
Disclaimer
  • Emphasise
  • Dont deny negative influence of e.g.
    indemnities, such as Boxer indemnity

4
Disclaimer
  • Emphasise
  • Dont deny negative influence of e.g.
    indemnities, such as Boxer indemnity
  • Dont deny some loss of political sovereignty

5
Disclaimer
  • Emphasise
  • Dont deny negative influence of e.g.
    indemnities, such as Boxer indemnity
  • Dont deny some loss of political sovereignty
  • But relevant question for today
  • Effect of participation in global trade and
    investment flows

6
Possible Harmful Effects
  • Destruction of Chinas handicraft industries,
    especially cotton textiles
  • Leading to impoverishment of peasantry

7
Possible Harmful Effects
  • Destruction of Chinas handicraft industries,
    especially cotton textiles
  • Leading to impoverishment of peasantry
  • Prevention of emergence of modern industry
  • Through unfair competition

8
Raise three issues
  • Economics not the same as politics

9
Raise three issues
  • Economics not the same as politics
  • Issue of unit of analysis
  • Sectoral and temporal

10
Raise three issues
  • Economics not the same as politics
  • Issue of unit of analysis
  • Sectoral and temporal
  • Issue of implied counterfactual hypothesis

11
Economics not the same as politics
  • Political loss of sovereignty
  • not the same as harmful economic effect, e.g. on
    GDP or living standards

12
Economics not the same as politics
  • Political loss of sovereignty
  • not the same as harmful economic effect, e.g. on
    GDP or living standards
  • Outrageous example

13
Kailuan coal mines
  • Illegal, basically criminal, take-over by foreign
    (British and Belgian) interests

14
Kailuan coal mines
  • Illegal, basically criminal, take-over by foreign
    (British and Belgian) interests
  • BUT
  • Was output lower than it would have been under
    Chinese control?

15
Kailuan coal mines
  • BUT
  • Was output lower than it would have been under
    Chinese control?
  • Were wages and conditions worse than they would
    have been under Chinese control?

16
Kailuan coal mines
  • BUT
  • Was output lower than it would have been under
    Chinese control?
  • Were workers wages and conditions worse than
    they would have been under Chinese control?
  • Not even clear that Chinese shareholders incomes
    lower than they would have been under Chinese
    control

17
Kailuan coal mines
  • Not arguing either way, except
  • Even outrageous and criminal swindle not
    necessarily, in any quantifiable way, harmful

18
Unit of Analysis
  • Fundamentally
  • Some lose out in economic change
  • But some gain
  • Need to look at both sides

19
Unit of Analysis
  • Fundamentally
  • Some lose out in economic change
  • But some gain
  • Need to look at both sides
  • Here look at example of textile industries

20
Textile industries
  • Losers
  • Cotton spinners
  • Replaced by factory yarn

21
Textile industries
  • But winners
  • Weavers
  • So part of loss of employment in hand spinning
    made up by hand weaving

22
Textile industries
  • But winners
  • Weavers
  • So part of loss of employment in hand spinning
    made up by hand weaving
  • Consumers
  • Enjoy cheaper and (probably) better quality
    textiles

23
Edgar Snow on Japanese Goods
  • Many Chinese necessary purchase entirely on a
    price basis, and here few native products can
    compete with the foreign article usually better
    in quality, also. The price margin is decisive
    for the average impoverished Chinese and the
    ingredient of patriotism cannot enter into it at
    all. It is generally a question of buying
    Japaneseor not buying!

24
Textile industries
  • But winners
  • Weavers
  • Consumers
  • People in other industries who gain from
    international trade

25
Textile industries
  • People in other industries who gain from
    international trade
  • Alvin Sos calculations
  • 58600 jobs lost among Guangdong cotton spinners
    during 1870s

26
Textile industries
  • People in other industries who gain from
    international trade
  • Alvin Sos calculations
  • 58600 jobs lost among Guangdong cotton spinners
  • BUT 59400 jobs gained by farmers working in silk
    export industry

27
Textile industries
  • One final point
  • Silk industry
  • Need to balance
  • Decades of prosperity in Jiangnan and Guangdong
    because of silk exports

28
Textile industries
  • One final point
  • Silk industry
  • Need to balance
  • Decades of prosperity in Jiangnan and Guangdong
    because of silk exports
  • Poverty and misery portrayed by Fei Xiaotong in
    the context of the Great Depression

29
Textile industries
  • One final point
  • Silk industry
  • Need to balance
  • Decades of prosperity in Jiangnan and Guangdong
    because of silk exports
  • Poverty and misery portrayed by Fei Xiaotong in
    the context of the Great Depression
  • No single right answer, but need to look at both
    sides

30
Textile industries
  • Should not just focus on losers, also look at
    winners

31
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • If talk about impact e.g. of foreign trade.
  • NOT an issue of what happened after growth of
    foreign trade in comparison with what happened
    before

32
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • If talk about impact e.g. of foreign trade.
  • NOT an issue of what happened after growth of
    foreign trade in comparison with what happened
    before
  • BUT of comparing what happened with foreign trade
    with what would have happened in some situation
    without foreign trade.

33
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • What that situation would have been is a very
    complex question.
  • Just time for one example

34
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • Pomeranz
  • Area along Grand Canal declined because Chinese
    governments attention diverted to coastal areas
    by imperialist aggression

35
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • Pomeranz
  • Area along Grand Canal declined because Chinese
    governments attention diverted to coastal areas
    by imperialist aggression
  • Therefore decline of those areas the result of
    imperialism

36
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • BUT
  • In what situation would what kind of Chinese
    government not have switched their attention to
    the coast?

37
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • Argument
  • Any Chinese government involved in articulating
    with world and world economy would inevitably
    focus on the coast at the cost of the interior.
  • For example reform government under Deng Xiaoping

38
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • So, what if they had cut themselves off from the
    world economy?

39
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • So, should they have cut themselves off from the
    world economy?
  • BUT, this also involves very serious costs

40
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • So, should they have cut themselves off from the
    world economy?
  • BUT, this also involves very serious costs
  • Costs of Chinas small involvement in foreign
    trade under Mao

41
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • So, should they have cut themselves off from the
    world economy?
  • BUT, this also involves very serious costs
  • Costs of Chinas small involvement in foreign
    trade under Mao
  • Costs of Third Front investment

42
Implied Counterfactual Hypothesis?
  • Again, no easy answer.
  • But need to examine
  • Plausibility of counterfactual hypothesis (could
    China have remained isolated in any
    circumstances)_
  • And cost of alternative (costs of isolation)

43
Conclusion
  • No easy answer either way
  • Core argument
  • Cannot approach this problem on basis of isolated
    examples of losers (or of winners) from world
    economy
  • This as true nowadays with globalisation as in
    the 19th and early 20th centuries
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