Sunday, February 26, 2017

Review of Task Force Report on US Policy toward China

This is originally posted on China US Focus

The Asia Society and UCSD under the co-chairmanship of Orville Schell and Susan Shirk, published a task force report on “US Policy Toward China: Recommendations for a New Administration.”  Schell is head of the Center on US-China Relations at Asia Society and Shirk is head of School of Global Policy and Strategy at UCSD.
Roughly two years in the making, the point of this report in view of the timing--published in February 2017--is obviously aimed to serve as a guide for the Trump administration. Near the beginning of the Executive Summary is the statement that reads: it is in the national interest of the United States to strive, if possible, for stable and mutually beneficial relations with China, and to maintain an active presence in the Asia-Pacific region.
As they read this report, the China bashing hawks within the administration won’t necessarily see any need to strive for “mutually beneficial relations with China.” The moderates in and out of the White House, on the other hand, may find the generally unfriendly (toward China) tone of the report surprising.
Aside from the two co-chairs, there are 12 members identified as “task force” co-authors. Many in this group are known not to hold warm and fuzzy feelings for China, at least not for the Beijing regime. This is clearly in contrast with the six task force participants that declined to sign on as co-authors of the report. The gang of six non-signatories is, in my opinion, among the faction of more empathetic China observers.
The Task Force Report identified six priority issues that the Trump Administration must deal with immediately while other issues can wait. Since I have just published my recommendation that President Trump has no choice but to collaborate with China, I would like to review the six issues that’s consistent with my published views.
Work with China to Halt North Korea’s Nuclear and Missile Program.
Former Secretary of Defense, Dr. William Perry recounted in his memoir that by the end of the Clinton’s administration, the US under his leadership was on the verge of reaching an agreement with North Korea. The provisions would have included Pyongyang agreeing to stop their nuclear program before getting the bomb.
Then the incoming Bush administration elected to ignore North Korea for two years and when contacts resumed, the White House added new demands on Pyongyang. By then Pyongyang had enough time to complete their development and test their nuclear weapon and thus became a bona fide member of the nuclear club. Once becoming an owner of the bomb, negotiations between the US and North Korea became even more difficult.
Trying to be helpful, Beijing organized six party talks to see if additional participants, namely China, Japan, Russia and South Korea, could help break the deadlock. The six party talks did not, but Washington can now conveniently blame China as the owner of the nuclear North Korea problem. Actually as I have pointed out in earlier issue of this publication, so long as China sits across the table from the US and South Korea, i.e., the interests of the three states are not aligned, China’s hands are tied. China needs North Korea as a buffer state and could not justify applying excessive pressure. Putting the survival of the Pyongyang regime in jeopardy would be against China’s national interest.
Unfortunately, recently South Korea’s president Park (before she was impeached) had agreed to allow the US to install Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) inside South Korea. Since the THAAD missile defense system is effective against long range, high trajectory missiles, installing the system on South Korea will intercept missiles heading for Seattle or Los Angeles but won’t do much to protect Seoul over the border from low trajectory, short range missiles. Park’s muddle headed decision put her relations with Beijing on deep freeze and of course does not encourage Beijing to want to work with the US-South Korea coalition. 
Reaffirm US Commitments to Asia.  
By “commitment to Asia” the authors mean for the US to continue the role as the world’s hegemon. Someday, the Trump Administration may conclude that the benefits of “reaffirmation” (another word for Obama’s American exceptionalism) cannot justify the cost.
Deploy Effective Tools to Address the Lack of Reciprocity in US Trade and Investment Relations with China.
The benefits to the US economy from US-China trade and investment are substantial, but rising protectionism in China and job losses in the United States—some of which are attributable to trade with China—are undermining public support for the broader relationship. In the early days of the bilateral relations, China provided all sorts of incentives and tax breaks to entice American companies into investing in China. Now that China has become an economic peer relative to developing countries, they are taking away the incentives. I suspect some of the feeling of “lack of reciprocity” is caused by foreign companies having to compete with local companies, now without the benefit of subsidies.
The feeling of American companies is likely in part due to missing the incentive packages of the good ole days but certainly provides grounds for negotiation. The American Chamber and the National Business Council are quite capable of taking the lead in discussing fairness of American companies in China. We all know everything in China is negotiable.
As discussed in my piece in Asia Times, there is no direct linkage between trade with China and loss of jobs in the US. The Trump Administration should instead focus on how to generate a continuing supply of qualified workers that would meet the needs of plants in the US driven by high technology such as automation and artificial intelligence. Chinese companies are also looking for skilled workers in the plants that they wish to locate in the US. That’s where the employment gap is at and that’s where new jobs will be created.
Intensify Efforts to Encourage a Principled, Rules-based Approach to the Management and Settlement of Asia-Pacific Maritime Disputes.
Ironically, the US has been the greatest cause of tension in the South China and East China Seas. To calm the waters, the Trump Administration should remove the irritant of constant surveillance by American naval ships and planes off China’s coast. Malaysia, Philippines and Vietnam have all shown that they are capable of settling their disputes with China amicably without Uncle Sam in the room.
As for the East China dispute, it’s time the White House recognizes that the US had deliberately sown the seeds of discord when Washington handed administrative control of Senkaku (Diaoyu in Chinese) to Tokyo in 1971. Until that point, there was no basis that those East China islands belong to anyone else other than Beijing or Taipei. If there was to be a dispute, it should have been between the two parts of China.
Respond to Chinese Civil Society Policies that Harm US Organizations, Companies, Individuals, and the Broader Relationship.
Bill Gates famously said when operating in another country, you would expect to abide by the rules and regulations of that country. It certainly would be the height of arrogance to expect every country to abide by American rules because America is so exceptional. That said I do believe unfettered exchange between the people of the two countries would greatly benefit both countries—so long, of course, as the exchanges take place without hidden malice and evil intentions. Exchanges should promote mutual understanding and trust while culturally enriching each other.
The report further claims that the current situation allows China to exert an inequitable influence over US public opinion through an unfettered flow of its propaganda. Ha! The Trump Administration should continue to allow, nay encourage, the Chinese to exert its influence. Judging from the flow of negative portrayal of everything related to China that dominates the American media, China has been doing a terrible job and this matter should be the least of Trump’s worries.
Sustain and Broaden US-China Collaboration on Global Climate Change.
Amen to this recommendation. The world’s perception is that China has already assumed the leadership on dealing with climate change. For the US to regain their place, certain members of the Trump Administration need to first take a tutorial on basic scientific truths. They need to accept that the world is not 6,000 years old and evolution by Darwin is not some Marxist-Leninist propaganda. Then they should think about the kind of legacy they want to leave for the future generations.


Friday, February 10, 2017

To make America great, Trump must collaborate with China

This piece first appeared in Asia Times.

President Trump is apparently delivering on his campaign promises through a rapid-fire volley of executive orders. These one to two page orders are simple to do. His most recent example is to ban entry for travelers from 7 majority-Muslim countries and thus he can assure fellow Americans that they can go to sleep at night.
To deliver on his promise about China is more complicated and will likely take more than one executive order or three or ten. Astute observers that understand basic principles of economics have often pointed out that the two economies have grown deeply intertwined and the two countries are joined at the hip.
Everybody knows that when one Siamese twin inflicts hurt on the other, both will feel the pain. Or, going a step further, one can’t mortally wound the other and not be committing suicide.
The premise of this essay is based on rational analysis derived from common sense and street smarts and not based on fantasy from some alternative universe.
Take the assertion that China is stealing American jobs through unfair trade practices and manipulation of the exchange rate. This assertion did not originate with Trump. He merely repeated the accusation bandied about by both sides of the Congressional aisle for many years.

The history of RMB to dollar exchange rate

From 1995 to 2005, China’s Renminbi (RMB) was pegged to the dollar at roughly Y8.3 to US$1. For a while the peg worked well. During the Asian financial crisis of 1997-8, various Asian currencies had to drop their exchange rate to keep their economy afloat. They were grateful to China for holding firm and not match their devaluation, thus giving the neighboring countries their needed breathing spell.
Starting from 2002, the US government initiated a deliberate weakening of the dollar. Since the RMB was fixed to the dollar, it weakened along with the dollar. This was when the China critics in the US began to accuse of China of currency manipulation. These critics should have accused the Bush Administration of currency manipulation but China was the easier patsy.
In part cowed by Washington, starting in 2005 People’s Bank of China gradually let the RMB strengthen relative to the dollar. By January 2014, the dollar was worth only about 6 RMB. But guess what, the strengthening of the RMB did not cause the trade gap to narrow as the critics claimed it would.
Nonetheless, the critics continue to accuse China of currency manipulation and blamed for unfair trade practices.

Who will be hurt more by import duty?

President Trump’s solution is to threaten to slap import duty on goods made in China. It doesn’t matter if the added tax is 15% or as much as 45% or if the tax is justifiable or not. Let’s just look at which Siamese twin will be hurt more by this levy at the port of entry.
Since the typical seller from China works on a thin margin, if the import goods from China are assessed an import duty, the seller will likely have to raise the price to cover the cost of the tax paid at the border. Because of the higher price, the seller will probably sell less to the American consumer.
What will the American consumer get out of this levied surcharge? The American gets to pay more for the daily use consumer goods usually made in China. (According to one study by US China Business Council, a typical American household saves US$852 per year buying goods from China.)
Will jobs come back to America as a consequence of the import barrier erected by Trump? Not likely. Once American industry has forgotten how to make a particular product, it will be difficult to get back to making it.
Furthermore, the labor cost in the US is at least ten fold higher than China. Even if American companies can begin to make the product, the selling price will be at least as high as the imported good from China with added duty.
So the bottom line is that the import tax will not bring any jobs back to the US but the cost of living for every American will be higher.
So how will this hurt the China side? China will sell less to the American market. While the US still represents a major market for China, 75% of China’s trade is now with other parts of the world. The Chinese, with time, will be able to adjust and compensate for the reduction in export sales to America.

China moving up the value chain

One of the adjustments already on going in China is to move up the value chain and to manufacture higher valued, more sophisticated products that have never been indigenous to the US. Thus while Mr. Trump is running after containers from China to tack on import duty stamps, the Chinese will be quietly surpassing America’s manufacturing prowess.
German companies were recently surprised to see samples of the lowly ballpoint pen, wholly made in China. To the Germans, these pens meant that the Chinese has now developed the technology to produce steel of required hardness with the ability to control fine thinness and mastered the required precision machining to make the tip of the pen. Heretofore only German and Japan, not even the US, have the technology.
Aside from the fact that Chinese companies are no longer mere copy cat manufacturers, the Trump Administration better come around and recognize the importance of trade with China as it relates to keeping jobs in America, fair trade or not.

Importance of China trade to the US economy

The Washington based US China Business Council released a report that categorically asserted that the negative impact of China on the US economy alleged by politicians is misleading and exaggerated. US China trade supports 2.6 million jobs in the US including jobs created by Chinese companies in the US. In the event of a trade war, how will President Trump find jobs to replace those lost?
In 2000, China was the 11th largest market for US goods and services. Now China is the third largest market. Still think China is unfair because of the huge trade deficit? The report explained that the trade deficit is based on faulty data and assumption.
Products assembled in China contain components made outside of China. If the value of the components made outside of China were subtracted from the value of China’s export, then the deficit would be reduced by half, or about the same extent of deficit as the US has with the EU. In other words, since the US has trade deficit with everybody, there is nothing particularly unfair about China’s trade with the US.
Even the Congressional Commission on US China Economic and Security, never known as friends of China, reported that since China joined the WTO in 2001, US exports to China have increased by more than 600% while US exports to the rest of the world over the same period was only up by 80%.
The Commission also reported that by the end of 2015, around 2000 Chinese-owned entities in the US has employed more than 100,000 Americans, more than 500% increase from four years earlier.

Fuyao Glass as case study of what the future could hold

Fuyao Glass is a recent case in point. This company is the largest supplier of auto glass in China, claiming to own 70% of the market. GM encouraged this supplier to build a plant in the US to be closer to their OEM customers in America.
Fuyao bought an old shuttered GM plant in Moraine Ohio for US$15 million and received more than US$10 million in tax credits and other incentives from the State of Ohio. When completed, Fuyao will have invested US$450 million; the largest Chinese investment in Ohio history, and will owned the world’s largest auto glass factory. The plant will make glass for 4 million cars and 4 million replacement windshields annually.
The payroll will begin at 2500 jobs and expand to 3000 and the plant is expected to inject US$25 to US$30 million into the Ohio economy every month. The company will also bring their technical innovations to the US market to share with their US based customers. Innovations include sun blocking, energy saving glass; embedded wire, heating glass; and solar glass for the car top roof.
Fuyao began their presence in the US long before President Trump won the election, so their decision can’t be attributed to the desire to just please the president. The decision was driven by sensible business considerations such as to maintain their customer relations by being close to their assembly plants and save the cost of shipping heavy glass from across the ocean.
Many other Chinese companies are looking to invest in the US for much of the same reasons. Over 30 some state economic development offices, from Georgia to California, understand the importance of China as a source of job creating investors and have been actively promoting their state and competing for China’s attention.
It will be crucial for the Trump Administration to see the essential value of collaborating with China and continue to build on the economic cooperation. Only China has the potential to help Trump make America great again. The relationship is far too importance for anyone in the administration to indulge in xenophobia or play chicken on the high seas.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Sino American Relations Since Ping-Pong Diplomacy


Published in 2016 annual issue of Diplomatist (India)

On April 6,1971, the 31st World Table Tennis Championship took place in Nagoya, Japan. Today, not many would remember the outcome of the international competition but the world remembers an act of friendship that led to “the week that changed the world.”

When an American player missed his bus after practice and the Chinese players invited him to ride in theirs, the athletes became friends. When this encounter was reported back to Beijing, China’s leader Mao Zedong promptly invited the American team to tour China after Nagoya.

The White House interpreted Mao’s invitation as a clear signal that China was interested in re-establishing relations with the U.S. In response, President Richard Nixon sent Henry Kissinger to Beijing to secretly arrange for Nixon’s visit to China.

Nixon went to China in February of the following year and he wrote that his diplomatic breakthrough with China was the week that changed the world. The encounter that led to his visit became known as Ping-Pong diplomacy. History would remember the event as the beginning of a new bilateral relationship between China and the U.S.

Cynics in the West attributed the entire matter to calculated manipulation by Mao rather than innocent friendship between athletes. Then again, pundits in the West tend to see ulterior motives related to anything that China does.

In reality, officials from China and the U.S. had been maintaining low-level diplomatic contacts for sometime and both sides had reached the conclusion that resuming official diplomatic relations was of mutual interests.

President Nixon felt that it was not realistic to isolate a quarter of the world’s mankind indefinitely and Mao realized that Nixon wanted to get out of the Vietnam quagmire and could use China’s help. Both were interested in forming a united front in face of a common adversary, namely the Soviet Union.

Shanghai Communiqué

At the end of Nixon’s visit in China, the U.S. and the PRC jointly issued the Shanghai Communiqué. In the Communiqué, the U.S. acknowledged that there was only one China and that Taiwan was a part of China. This acknowledgement was absolutely essential to China in order for Nixon’s visit to be considered a success.

The Communiqué has indeed served the bilateral relations well. Every US president since Nixon has pledged to honor the terms contained in the joint agreement. Despite or perhaps because of the latitude for interpretation by the ambiguity in the document, Beijing has been sufficiently reassured by the American pledge.

To the Chinese, the American pledge means that the U.S. will not interfere in the evolving development of the cross-straits relations between Taiwan and the mainland. Washington would add to China’s understanding with “so long as the cross-straits relations proceed peacefully.”

Formal normalization

The next milestone in the U.S. China relations was the formal normalization between the two countries on January 1, 1979. One can see the greatest importance Beijing placed on this agreement for normalization when the People’s Daily splashed the news in the form of a proclamation, printed in a special one-page extra edition in bold red ink. The only previous occasion when such a special edition was published was to announce the detonation of China’s first atomic bomb (and much later when China put a man in space).

Mao died in 1976 and by 1979, Deng Xiao-ping had returned to power and he celebrated the normalization with a grand tour of the U.S. in mid January. Despite his diminutive physical stature, he was a media sensation. Photos of Deng wearing a ten-gallon cowboy hat charmed the American public. What followed after Deng’s visit was a decade long honeymoon in Sino American relations.

While Deng got the bilateral relations off on an up-beat note, he was busy leading the reform of China’s economic policy. Where the central planners used to set the production goals and allocate the resources, now state control was gradually loosened. China went through a transitional phase when it was called a market economy with socialist characteristics. Eventually China dropped any pretense and simply referred theirs as a market economy.

Deng begins reform

During this period, the world came to know Deng by a number of his favorite aphorisms. By “to get rich is glorious,” Deng was recognizing that as market dynamics were allowed to exert their influence on the economy, some individuals would become wealthy before others. He saw that it was inevitable and the country would be better off than when everybody remained equally poor under Mao.

“It doesn’t matter if it’s a white cat or black cat, so long as it catches mice, it is a good cat.” This expression was a salute to pragmatism as Deng decided to move away from total state control to policies that will encourage individual initiative and entrepreneurism.

“Crossing the river while groping for the stones,” reflected the experimental nature of the policy changes that Deng had embarked. Sometimes this meant one small cautious step at a time and measure the impact before taking another. Other times, policy changes were applied to a small region to fully understand the impact before introducing the change on a national scale.

These quotes reflected Deng’s move away from ideology and dogma toward a pragmatic approach that was to stimulate China’s economy and set China on the road of more than three decades of double-digit growth. Deng’s pragmatism meant allowing foreign direct investments to participate in China’s economy, i.e., opening some windows even if it meant letting in some (Western) flies.

Tiananmen resets the relations

The next major marker in the Sino-American relations was June 4, 1989. The previous nightfall and early dawn was when the People’s Liberation Army tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square and dispersed the student protesters gathered there. On the way to the square, some PLA soldiers were assaulted and some bystanders and protesters were shot and killed. To this day, official tally of the casualty is not known.

Ironically, Soviet leader Gorbachev made a state visit to Beijing that May with a large contingent of western media in tow. The media noticed a ragtag group of student protesters in Tiananmen that had been there since April.

The students had been protesting official corruption and unfair and arbitrary job assignment following their graduation. After interacting with the western media, the student protest was energized and turned into a full-blown protest, ostensibly in quest of democracy.

After Gorbachev returned to Moscow, the media stayed behind to follow the student protest that in part they had inadvertently rekindled. Thus in the confrontation that ensued, the western media had front row seats to witness the shootings, the bloodied civilians, the bodies on the street and the world famous image of the lone young man standing in front of a column of tanks.

The world was shocked by the images shown on their TV as transmitted live from Beijing. China was loudly condemned for gross violation of human rights. Some members of the U.S. Congress were particularly vehement and vociferous.

Gorbachev was a mere two years away from presiding the total implosion and disintegration of the Soviet Union. The USSR menace had been fading for some time and therefore so was the importance and relevance of the Sino American alliance to oppose the USSR. Tiananmen marked the end of the long Sino-American honeymoon.

Overseas Chinese invests in China

After the Tiananmen debacle, some of the western companies already in China hesitated or even retreated from China. Deng strived harder than ever to open up China with economic reform. His historic tour of Shenzhen in 1992 as one of the first Special Economic Zones launched the transformation of a sleepy fishing village into an eventual megapolis that was to become more Hong Kong than even Hong Kong.

A popular notion was that the developed countries with advanced economies and technologies came pouring into China in response to the open windows. In reality, for the first decade after Deng’s southern tour, the major influx of foreign direct investments did not come from the West.

The first chunk of FDI came over the border from Hong Kong Chinese industrialists. They were the first to move their manufacturing operations to Shenzhen and surrounding area to take advantage of the lower wages and to enjoy various incentives.

The Taiwan companies were the next wave to follow and move their operations into China. Their lines of businesses, such as electronics, were generally more sophisticated than the Hong Kong products. Both groups of investors enjoyed not only government incentives but also the ability to operate in an environment of a common language and culture.

Often overlooked and not given enough credit, these Hong Kong and Taiwan companies introduced good manufacturing practices into China and helped raise the quality and productivity of the workforce in China. Local Chinese operations were forced to discard the lackadaisical attitudes ingrained by years of state control (popularly known as iron rice bowl mentality) and raise their productivity in order to compete.

By the time western companies entered China in significant numbers to set up their manufacturing plants, the effectiveness of the Chinese workforce already had the benefit of a decade or more learning from the presence of Hong Kong and Taiwan companies.

Beginning of the age of terrorism

When bin Laden’s gang of terrorist attacked New York’s world trade center on September 11, 2001, a lot had already changed in the Sino-American relations.

The neoconservatives in the U.S. saw the collapse of Soviet Union as the opportunity to project American might and move toward world domination as the sole superpower standing. Others in need of a replacement adversary to continue to justify the massive allocation for the national defense budget began to look at China as the most likely candidate.

The idea of American hegemony and a strong military budget often goes hand in hand among policymakers in Washington. They were the same folks that believe a shock and awe blitzkrieg in Iraq would lead to quick celebration of American soldiers as liberators in Baghdad—a horrendous miscalculation that continues to exact a toll in human suffering today.

Thus consistent with a warmongering mentality, politicians from the left and right derived political profit by attacking a demonized China and accusing their opponent of not being tough on China. At every presidential election, aspiring candidates invariably attacked the incumbent for being soft on China.

Once the winning candidate moved into the White House, the newly elected president had to face the reality that the relationship with China was too important to be treated as a throwaway piece in the game of domestic politics.

By 9-11 2001, China’s economy, doubling every 7 years, had become too large to dismiss in the name of politics. Its economy fueled by low cost labor and being export driven complemented perfectly with the U.S. economy driven by conspicuous consumption that needed low cost imports from China.

Economists, not politicians, observed that the two economies were just like Siamese twins joined at the hip. Killing one would be fatal to the other. Some members of Congress, knowing full well that there is no downside to criticizing China, have taken full advantage to pummel China for political points from their constituents.

Thus as the world watched in horror the collapse of the twin towers in lower Manhattan, China’s president Jiang Zemin called George W. Bush at the White House to express his condolences and offer China’s solidarity with the U.S. in the fight against the radical jihadists. Surely, Jiang must have thought that now that the Americans have a real enemy, they can direct their vitriol away from China.

Indeed, in the name of war on terror, Americans marched into Iraq and Afghanistan and now have their hands full dealing with the mess that they created. It was beginning to look like falling into another Vietnam quagmire that will take a long time to extricate. It became more important to get along with China than not.

Financial crisis of 2008

Then came the world financial collapse of 2008. This crisis was caused by the funny money schemes such as credit default swaps and mortgage-backed securities created by the wizards of Wall Street. The crisis caught the world by surprise.

To keep the giant multinational banks that were too big to fail from failing, the U.S. government injected massive amounts of dollars to give the banks enough liquidity to keep their heads above water.

To protect China’s economy from being swamped by the global financial tsunami, Beijing invested heavily in domestic infrastructure projects, such as superhighways, bridges, high-speed rail, ports and airports.

At the end of the crisis, the U.S. government saved its economy and recovered the funds lent to the banks in distress. China got a breathtaking leap in infrastructure improvements that continue to fuel the growth of their economy.

Most damaging of all, the crisis shook Beijing’s faith and confidence in Washington and in the stability of the dollar. To reduce their holdings and exposure to the dollar, China has entered numerous currency swap agreements with many of its trading partners and by-pass having to settle trade transactions in dollars.

Barrack Obama was elected president in 2008 and inherited two hot potatoes. In his eight years, he managed to tame one of them, the financial demon that threatened to sink the U.S. economy and right the ship at home.

On the international front, he was far less successful. Not only did he not end the conflict of Afghanistan and Iraq as pledged in his campaign, Obama’s foreign policy had allowed and even encouraged Islamic terrorism to spread uncontrollably to Syria, Egypt and Libya.

Given the full plate, one would assume that the U.S. would seek to find accommodation with China’s rise, but the opposite has been true. The neocon hawks in Washington has been anticipating, almost gleefully, the inevitable Thucydides Trap between a rising power and the reigning power.

The Trap presaged the collision and conflict between China and the U.S. However, that a rising power and a reigning power must resort to killing each other is very much a western idea based on western experiences tracing back to the days of Athens vs. Sparta. It remains to be seen how far the U.S. can push China into a corner before China gets exasperated enough to become a western state and fight back.

China’s way forward

Partly motivated by not holding vast reserves of US dollars, China’s new leader, Xi Jinping, has been offering a different kind of international relations with his “one belt, one road” initiative along with the formation of the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank. He is offering to apply China’s experience and expertise in infrastructure projects gained since 2008 to build along the maritime and land silk roads from China to Europe. These projects could be financed by AIIB along with other development banks.

Xi is not going around giving away foreign aid packages. The beneficiary countries would be co-participants and co-investors in the infrastructure projects.  The projects would have to be economically sound with reasonable prospect of payback. Xi believes infrastructure investments will improve the local economy. Eventually the improved economies would be integrated for the benefit of all the economies on the belt or road.

Many countries are already seeing the appeal of being part of Xi’s win-win collaboration. U.K. was the first to ignore Washington’s contrarian advice and rushed to become the first western power to be a founding member of AIIB. When Xi made his state visit to London in late 2015, the British government rolled out the red carpet to make sure that Xi got the message, namely, U.K. considers China’s friendship to be of their highest priority.

The newly elected president Rodrigo Duterte of Philippines seemed to agree with U.K.’s point of view. He has shunned the confrontation on the contested island in the South China Sea favored by his predecessor and signaled a willingness to talk the matter over with China. He too sees value in collaborating with China and being included in the maritime silk route.

Choices for India

For non-aligned nations such as India, there is a choice. On the one hand, India can seek the security that comes with being protected by the military might of Uncle Sam, subject, of course, to Uncle Sam’s whim on whether defending India continues to be in his national interest. Since the U.S. already spends beyond their means for the military, India would be expected to contribute their share of the burden.

America’s reassurance to India on the ties that bind would be based on the fact that both have a democratic form of government. The people of India should be in the excellent position to decide on their own as to how well democracies have worked for them in the past and can function in the future.

On the other hand, India can seek to become an economic partner with China and collaborate on infrastructure development. China will not seek to interfere with how India is governed nor insist on entering into military alliances. India would simply benefit from China’s experience in building and completing giant projects on time and under budget—something democracies are not good at.

Of course, developing relations with China and the U.S. are not mutually exclusive. Keeping friendly relations with both superpowers will simply require skillful diplomacy and bearing in mind that the expectations from the two will be very different.

Just June this year India along with Pakistan has signed the necessary memorandum to be admitted as member nations of Shanghai Cooperation Organization in 2017. SCO has been evolving since it was established 15 years ago with China and Russia as the prime movers. Other current members include Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. With Iran expected to be the next member to be admitted, the SCO alliance will soon cover a huge part of Asia and nearly half of the world’s population.

The primary aim of SCO is to promote mutual cooperation in safe guarding the military and economic security of its members. Non-interference of the internal affairs of the member states is part of the charter. Obviously it is an alignment not designed to please Washington. (The American application to be an observer was rejected in 2005.)

In joining SCO, India shows that it already knows how to hedge its bet. Xi is betting that more countries will see economic cooperation to be more aligned to their national interest than military confrontation favored by the United States.