INTERNATIONAL
Europe’s soft power versus China’s brute force in the global marketplace
Summer 2010
Europeans tend to be over-pessimistic about their economic strengths vis-à-vis China, says Jonathan Story. He looks at the cultural and political forces that have so far shaped their relationship
This is definitely not a good time to be upbeat about the EU. The unfolding drama of Greek public finances threatens to unravel one of the club’s main achievements in crafting a monetary union of 16 different states, while the non-policy to emerge from the Copenhagen summit on climate change last December was decided over the Commission’s head by a de facto alliance between the U.S. and main emerging market countries of China, Brazil, South Africa, Russia and Brazil. To cap it all, U.S. President Barack Obama decided not to attend May’s EU summit in Madrid to celebrate the Lisbon treaty. The Chinese press tends to describe the European Union as disunited, inward-looking and characterised by low economic growth. And the prevalent mood of pessimism in Brussels about the EU, and the stiffening of China’s resolve to project its national interest into world politics neatly complement each other.
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| If the EU believed its own rhetoric, it would be relaxed about the
narrative of China as a threat to world stability and to its own status.
Of the various explanations of China’s rapid emergence as a power on
the global stage, the portrayal of China as a youthful 800-pound gorilla
in the global zoo is the least credible. According to this view, China
remains the nationalistic and unreformed Marxist-Maoist-Leninist
party-state of 1949. But China’s leadership has in fact managed a
successful transformation away from the inherited Maoist policies of
class war at home and abroad to pursue development at home, and has
instead embedded China in the inter-dependent world economy.
For
its part, the EU has achieved global status as a mosaic of like-minded
sovereign states that form neither a new entity nor constitute an
international organisation. Each of its member states is legally
constituted, while being genetically conditioned to be diplomatically
polygamous. Mark Twain said of polygamy, “no man can serve two masters”,
yet the puritans of EU integration preach political monogamy because
that is what other sovereign powers such as the United States and China
do.
Europe may be in part comedy, but it nonetheless weighs
heavy in international affairs. It is the world’s No 1 economy and
trader and as its prime importer it has no alternative but to maintain
open markets. The EU’s combined labour force is 225m strong, and yields a
per capita income of $32,000, less than the high productivity labour
force of the U.S. at $46,000, but six times that of China. The EU is
China’s prime trade partner, as it is for Africa, Russia and the Middle
East while counting among the top trade partners of Latin American
countries and India.
The European footprint on the world economy
is giant size. It is overwhelmingly the world’s prime recipient of
inward investment, and by far the largest source of foreign direct
investment in the world – with a stock of historic cost-based foreign
assets about twice that of the U.S. The EU and the U.S. both have chosen
to place the great part of their stock in each other, and over the past
two decades EU corporations have accounted for over 70% of total inward
investment in the U.S. The total stock of U.S. investment in Spain
alone is greater than the combined position of the U.S. in China and
India together, and the EU investment stock in China is barely 5% of
that in the U.S. In essence, the Chinese surplus with the EU runs
through foreign corporates manufacturing in China, adding some value
from offshore component suppliers, and re-exporting to the world’s prime
importer.
None of this is to decry Chinese achievements over the
past three decades in hoisting over 300m people to modest prosperity,
nor is it to understate the problems confronting EU countries. My point
is to draw attention to the difficulty Europeans have in placing Europe
in perspective. And it’s also, no wonder that the Chinese leadership has
a problem in dealing with Europe. German unification in 1990
and the end of Europe’s division was followed by the intellectual
hegemony of a post-modern world view in Europe, while China’s exit from
Mao’s failed experiment in permanent revolution has been informed by an
older ambition to modernise China in the image of a nation state. The
ethos of the EU – the language in which the Brussels village talks to
itself about itself, the rest of Europe and the world – is all about
overcoming Europe’s fragmentation in favour of a closer union. The hope
has been to tip-toe around member state sovereignties, flattering the
local monarchs while stealing their robes. The expectation has been that
sooner or later the European publics will spot that their monarchs are
naked. But as the Chinese have been quick to observe, this has not
happened. Quite the contrary, EU member states remain the near exclusive
proprietors of their citizens’ loyalties.
China’s modernisation
ambitions are, by contrast, to insist on achieving equality and status
with the western world by an assertion of national sovereignty. They see
this as the key to economic development and a vital tool for repelling
the imperial pretensions of foreign powers. China therefore hopes to
play on the EU’s internal divisions by strengthening bi-lateral ties
between Beijing and national capitals, and thus to puncture the EU’s
pretension as an international organisation to equal status with an
aspiring global power such as China. Chinese diplomacy is not calling in
question the EU’s apparent ambition to “speak with one voice”; it is
just politely reminding the EU that it will only pay attention when it
does.
Chinese diplomacy has in short been too clever by half. It
has hoisted the Brussels village on its own petard, but it does so at
the cost of hugely underestimating the significance of the EU in the
real world. The curious thing is that it is encouraged to do so by
Europeans’ own difficulties in conceiving their arrangements as sui
generis, and therefore not to be compared to anywhere else in the world.
Until Europeans do learn how to think about themselves as they
are, and not as some of their number would want them to be, it can
hardly come as a surprise that the rest of the world experiences the
same difficulties. The dilemmas in the China-EU relationship are perhaps
best illustrated by the competition between them in trade and sport.
Take
trade first. China exited from the Cold War in a very different way to
the EU, whose project to create an internal market was flanked by a
“social chapter” aimed at improving the provision of welfare services to
all EU citizens. By contrast, China’s desire to enter the WTO and
import U.S. and EU norms of government-business conduct was flanked by
the abandonment of the remaining Maoist welfare ideals. The country
became an Adam Smith economy run by a Marxist-Leninist-Maoist state – a
formidable combination that offers its citizens a future of work, saving
and material betterment for the collective good of the nation and the
prestige of the communist party. It also poses a challenge to the EU’s
welfare arrangements by bringing the labour forces of the EU and China
into collaboration and competition. Because EU welfare and
knowledge-based policies are nationally rooted but may be collectively
networked, discussion about “what to do about China” has moved
centre-stage in EU capitals. Yet the EU is barely able to act, as it
cannot close access to its own markets nor can it bring itself to
recognising China as a market economy.
Then there is sport. The
opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics in September 2008 was fully
exploited by the Chinese leadership yet there was barely a mention of
the regime’s founder, other than President Hu Jintao’s wearing of a Mao
suit. China’s athletes scored impressive results; coming first with 51
gold medals and 49 silver and bronze. But the overall winner, far ahead
on medals of any other part of the world, was the combined EU member
states with nearly three times China’s score.
What do trade,
welfare and sport have in common and what has this to do with the
China-EU relations? Everything. Trade is structured, and welfare, labour
market and sport issues are promoted at member state level. Judged on a
world scale, the EU is a global power with global reach, while the
aggregate of standards among EU member states is very high, and capable
of indefinite improvement.
In this light, what is astounding is
the gulf between the real Europe and the prevalent pessimism about the
EU. It is difficult to decide who needs counseling most: Chinese
diplomacy or the inhabitants of the Brussels village. |
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The Summer 2010 issue of Europe's World looks at a number of policy areas where that lesson must be borne firmly in mind by today's decisionmakers. The global economic recession has laid bare a range of issues that need to be addressed very promptly before they develop further and become difficulties of a very different magnitude. It has also accentuated long-term trends to which Europe has so far failed to respond.
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IS THE WELFARE STATE A LUXURY THAT EUROPEAN COUNTRIES CAN NO LONGER AFFORD?
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