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CHINA: Class 4 Integration of China into the global economy.

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Presentation on theme: "CHINA: Class 4 Integration of China into the global economy."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHINA: Class 4 Integration of China into the global economy

2 Prior to the reform period q Self-reliance--AUTARKY q only resort to trade when necessary q prohibit foreign investment q no participation in World Bank, IMF q avoid dependence on foreign aid, loans

3 TITLE Indicator of magnitude of change merchandise trade value & % of GDP

4 Value of exports + imports as percent of GDP A little misleading???

5 Value of total exports (Billions $US)

6 Value of Exports 1997 Plus re-exports through Hong Kong (almost doubles?) Annual % change 1990-97

7 Foreign private capital investment to: q Diversify industrial base q access to new technology q upgrade managerial and labor skills Major source of tension

8 Trends--cumulative FDI in billions $US

9 Net Private capital Flows (billions $US) 1994

10 Example of a spatial diffusion process q Some regions were opened up earlier and more fully q result: substantial unevenness of participation

11 Export share of provincial Gross State Product, 1990 Example of Foreign Trade

12 Province Share of Total Chinese Exports, 1990 1994 44%???

13 Device--Special Economic Zones q Initially set up Guangdong and Fujian provinces--s.e. coastal provinces close to Hong Kong and Taiwan q Think of as Export Processing Zones q various incentives were offered to attract FDI

14 Concept of bamboo network q Descendents of those forced out of China q Why so important? q Dissatisfaction with response of US, Japan etc. q language and cultural linkages

15 Sources of Chinese FDI, 1987-91 (100 million $US, contracted value)

16 Hong Kong q Initial role was one of entrepot for Chinese trade q post-1949. Became major mfg. center thanks to emigrants from Shanghai (textiles, plastic flowers, rattan furniture--> electronics, precision machinery) q from mid 1980s massive transfer of mfg. capacity to China (Guangdong)

17 Impacts on Hong Kong economy q Dramatic decline in manufacturing q from 1,000,000 ---> 386,000 workers q from 45% ---> 16% of workforce q increasingly specialized in business services--finance, marketing, transport communications services to Chinese industrial economy

18 Issue: Contribution of foreign investment to Chinese economic growth q Prior to 1990, FDI was less than 1% of GDP q until 1991, virtually all of industrial output of foreign-invested companies was exported--no domestic market presence q conclusion--economic reform was the initial key

19 A closer look at textile and clothing exports

20 Textile exports by developing economies % of total for developing economies

21 Clothing exports by developing economies

22 Future trends??? q tariffs on textiles and clothing are scheduled for elimination by 2005 q China should profit especially if admitted to WTO q BUT. Changes in rules of origin for US market make assemblage country the country of origin. q May hurt China DEMAND SIDE

23 q Impact of trade agreements like q NAFTA q preferential trade agreements between EU and Turkey and Eastern Europe q Japan’s intention to apply restrictions on exports of Chinese textiles and clothing q 1994: China accounted for 54% of Japan’s clothing imports

24 Supply side factors q Some shortages of labor in coastal regions will create supply constraints unless Chinese q relax constraints on migration out of areas with surplus unskilled labor q improve infrastructure in inland areas to promote industrial expansion there


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