Why China is rejoicing over the RCEP
With the signing of the RCEP yesterday, the largest economic community in the world is very much in the making. Zaobao correspondent Yu Zeyuan examines what the RCEP means for China and the world, not least the US, which is not a member of the RCEP.
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (RCEP) was officially signed yesterday. China can finally heave a sigh of relief after much anxiety that the signing might be derailed. Chinese media expressed its excitement with headlines filled with superlatives such as "world's largest" and "super heavyweight".
The Chinese authorities, too, can hardly hide their joy. According to a Xinhua report, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said yesterday that the signing of the RCEP is "not only a monumental achievement in East Asian regional cooperation" but a "victory of multilateralism and free trade". He added that the signing "shines light and hope through dark clouds" and shows that multilateralism and free trade is still the right way to go for the world economy and human progress.
In fact, before yesterday's RCEP signing, China was worried that the US would block its allies such as Japan, Korea, and Australia from signing the agreement.
It is evident that the dark clouds that Li spoke of includes the enormous impact of the coronavirus on the global economy, and is also a subtle reference to the damage to multilateralism and free trade caused by the unilateralist "America First" policies of the Trump administration over the past few years. In fact, before yesterday's RCEP signing, China was worried that the US would block its allies such as Japan, Korea, and Australia from signing the agreement.
Indeed, the US does not want the RCEP to be signed, not just because the US is not part of it, but more because the US does not want China to play a leading role in East Asia cooperation. Just last week, a senior US State Department official strongly encouraged Korea and Japan to speak up about human rights and data protection issues, despite their trade relations with China.
The population, economic volume, and trade value of the 15 RCEP members makes up 30% of the global total.
But the RCEP has happened, for a simple reason - compared to security fears (which lack evidence) and human rights (which is an abstract idea), latching on to China's rapid economic growth through free trade and economic integration to revive and stimulate local economies hit by the pandemic is a common consensus and benefit for China and other RCEP signatories. As for the rights and wrongs of the China-US tussle, that is another issue that need not be mixed up with economic cooperation.
RCEP is China's bulwark against US-led coalition
For China, the signing of the RCEP is an unmitigated victory. The population, economic volume, and trade value of the 15 RCEP members makes up 30% of the global total. With the world's largest free trade zone, China has more confidence to take on the US.
Over the past two years, the deterioration of China-US relations has worsened the external environment for China. Within China, people are finding it increasingly difficult to do business, especially companies involved in foreign trade. Many people are worried and feel that it is very difficult to change external perceptions of China, and the future is full of uncertainty.
With this framework in place, it would be much more costly for America to build a unified front against China in East Asia and even the world.
While multilateralist Joe Biden defeated unilateralist Donald Trump to become the next US president, whether Biden's multilateralism includes China is still uncertain. Besides, many people believe that Biden will change Trump's approach of withdrawing from various international agreements after he takes office, and rally its allies to exert further pressure on China. For example, the US could participate in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) that China is not a member of, using that as a renewed united front against China.
The RCEP will be a unified free trade zone in the East Asia region that facilitates cross-border movement of commodities, capital, technology and people within the region. With this framework in place, it would be much more costly for America to build a united front against China in East Asia and even the world. It could even make it impossible for the US to stop China's influence in the economic and trade sectors.
China's relations with Japan and South Korea set to improve
RCEP also paves the way for bilateral tariff reduction arrangements between Japan and China as well as Japan and South Korea. Among East Asian economies, the economies of China, Japan and South Korea are the most complementary and have the broadest prospects for cooperation. While these three countries are also negotiating a free trade agreement, the negotiation process is not smooth due to historical problems and real contradictions, as well as the US's obstructions. Through the RCEP framework, China, Japan and South Korea have broken some of their trade barriers, which will greatly benefit the establishment of a series of economic integration plans in the future. With closer economic and trade ties between China, Japan, and South Korea, it would be more difficult for the US to use Japan and South Korea to contain China.
However, on balance, the RCEP will also provide great impetus for China's economic transformation and advancement.
Undoubtedly, the RCEP will also bring some challenges to China. As China's labour and environmental costs increase, some of China's labour-intensive industries will face strong competition from Vietnam and other countries. At the same time, in terms of high-end products, relevant Chinese enterprises will also face competition from similar Japanese and Korean enterprises. In terms of agricultural products, China will also have to face Australia and New Zealand and their competitive advantages. However, on balance, the RCEP will also provide great impetus for China's economic transformation and advancement.
Overall, the RCEP offers China far more opportunities than challenges. The benefits that it will bring also go beyond merely fending off suppression from the US. In the short term, the RCEP will expand China's economic, trade and investment exchanges with other countries in the region, and create more room for China's exports and investments, greatly benefiting China's foreign trade enterprises. For Chinese consumers, more high-quality foreign products will enter the Chinese market with lower tariffs, which is certainly a boon as well.
In the long term, following the implementation of the RCEP, not only will the world's largest economic community emerge in East Asia, but it will also continue to grow and expand. As the country with the greatest economic weight, most complete value chains, and the strongest overall strength in the RCEP framework, as long as China takes the lead in abiding by the agreement and displays its strength as a great power, it will not only reap benefits in economics and trade, but also in terms of its international image.