U.S. Trade
Policy toward China: Discrimination and its Implications
|
Chad
P. Bown
|
Rachel
McCulloch
|
|
Brandeis
University &
The Brookings
Institution
|
Brandeis
University
|
June 2005
Abstract
The bilateral
relationship with China
has become a major focus of U.S.
trade policy. This paper examines recent
U.S. policy
toward imports from China,
highlighting important explicitly and implicitly discriminatory elements.
Discriminatory restrictions on U.S.
trade with China
protect competing domestic industries as well as non-Chinese foreign suppliers
with an established presence in the U.S.
market. Unlike discriminatory U.S.
treatment of Japan
in the 1980s, in which “gray-area” measures like voluntary export restraints
were prominent, most U.S.
actions toward China
are fully consistent with current WTO rules, including the special terms of China’s
2001 WTO accession. However, as with
earlier discriminatory actions directed primarily at Japan,
U.S. trade
policy toward China
is likely to have complex effects on global trade flows and may produce
outcomes far different from those intended.