It is a bit hard to believe that any story involving China has been underreported, given China's large role in the global public debate.
But China's transformation into a major auto exporter has been wildly underreported.
(see the hockey stick in exports of finished cars)
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China has gone from a large net importer of finished (mostly from the EU, the Japanese firms never thought they could sell in China w/o producing in China) to a net exporter remarkably quickly ...
(China has been a net exporter of auto parts for some time)
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The US has long been a net importer of autos (mostly from Japan and Korea, but to a degree from Europe too).
And the EU has long been a net exporter of autos.
China has suddenly become a major global competitor
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I suspect that you need a Ph.D in political science -- or perhaps psychology and trade law :) -- to understand why the Commission's main response to a surge in Chinese competition (primarily in EVs) has been to threaten to challenge the US in the WTO ...
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I do understand that the IRA discriminates against European EV exports to the US (there aren't very many yet & the EU EV market is also undersupplied & will absorb any lost sales)
But the big swing in global demand for EU autos right now is coming from China, not the US.
5/5
this thread was inspired both by this Bloomberg story, and the EU's current freakout over the IRA (& its long silence over China's obviously discriminatory policies in the EV sector, which have had a much bigger impact on EU auto exports and employment)
@gdp1985 would be cautious on the "solar prices' increase bit --
China would block exports of its wafer production tech, not the wafers/ cells (so no immediate impact on price, unless others introduce restrictions)
@gdp1985 and long-term effect of other countries investment in their own wafer production technology (and frankly capacity, as it is all now in China) would well be a glut and lower prices ...
@gdp1985 to get the end result of "fragmentation and higher prices" rather than a subsidy war and lower prices for consumers (at a cost to tax papers) you need countries to end up walling off to create captive markets for their production --
Wolfgang Munchau picked up on my observation that there was a bit of irony in Belgium's PM criticizing the US for luring EU firms across the pond with tax breaks.
@J_B_C16 perhaps I am missing something, but surely China's policies also led to "supply chain investments" --
EU auto markets wanting to sell EVs in China had to produce in China (with a JV partner so some de facto tech transfer) & use Chinse made batteries (often CATL) to qualify
@J_B_C16 Vestas famously set up a Chinse facility and helped build out a "localized" China supply chain to get Chinese business in wind -- and in the process helped create the Chinse supply chain that supported the Chinese wind giants (now vestas competitors)
@J_B_C16 Chinese policies certainly led EU firms to produce in China with localized parts -- so a shift in supply chains.
And now Chinese production is actually competing for EU subsidies and demand (which could cut into EU employment ...)
The timing of the impact of last year's dollar strength on demand for is US goods is one small part of the debate over "long and variable" lags - and thus near-term course of the US economy.
The advance trade data for December hints that trade deficit may now be rising again
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The course of the 2022 trade balance was set by the timing of the inventory correction in core manufactured goods (consumer and capital goods + autos) and the associated fall in imports from their March 22 peak.
Exports are now flat, and imports jumped in Dec.
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My gut is that the level of consumer goods imports is now close to where it should be (after huge distortions during the pandemic) and thus further falls from post COVID normalization won't drive the data.
Autos --and transportation equipment more generally -- has been one industrial sector were China wasn't a hub for global supply. Cars made in China used to stay in China ...
No more
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Chinese cars are also really made in China, not just assembled in China.
"The growth in the supply chain in China has also kept pace with car manufacturing. Domestic companies now make almost all parts, including those they used to import until about a decade ago"
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I would nuance Bloomberg's argument that "the surge in car exports has largely gone unnoticed in the US" in a couple of important ways though --
Banks, classically, raise funds by taking in deposits and issuing bonds -- providing their clients with liquid financial assets.
And they use those funds to support long-term loans ...
. @StephenPaduano and I argue that the world's now unused SDRs should be viewed a pool of stable long-term funding for the World Bank (and possibly other MDBs), and be tapped creatively to expand the Bank's lending capacity ...