The Pettis Paradigm and the Second China ShockWill tariffs help rebalance the global economy (and the Chinese economy)?Wow, two China-related posts in two days! This one is going to be less dire and more wonkish than yesterday’s, because it’s about China’s economy and the international trade situation, instead of about war and conflict. (The two aren’t entirely unrelated, of course.) China has a huge and growing trade surplus, as you can see in the chart above. That chart is via Brad Setser, who is really a one-man army in terms of tracking global trade and financial flows. Here’s a thread from Setser with a lot more detail on China’s surplus. Interestingly, China’s exports to the developing world are a lot bigger of a factor here than its exports to the U.S. and the EU, though the latter are up by a little bit. This is the Second China Shock. Trade surpluses like this can’t be explained by the good old theory of comparative advantage — a Chinese trade surplus is just countries writing China IOUs in exchange for physical goods. Countries don’t really have a comparative advantage in writing IOUs.¹ Why trade surpluses and deficits do happen is an important and interesting and complex question, and my general impression from reading a bunch of economics papers on the topic is “No one really knows”. It probably has something to do with the fact that China’s government is directing its banks to loan vast amounts of money to manufacturers, and paying manufacturers tons of subsidies on top of that. But there also has to be some sort of financial factor involved that prevents China’s currency from appreciating and allowing Chinese people to buy more imports. This could be something the Chinese government is doing intentionally, or it could be a natural outgrowth of China’s economic difficulties. More on this later. The question is what to do about the vast flood of Chinese exports. Overwhelmingly, from all sides of the commentariat, there has been one main policy proposal² for the world outside of China: tariffs on Chinese goods. The MAGA people, obviously, endorse this idea — tariffs are one of their big policy ideas. In addition, some commentators suggest that China should shift its economic model toward promoting domestic consumption instead of yet more manufacturing. Many of the people suggesting this are private-sector macroeconomists who work for banks, writers, or other private-sector analysts. But notably, Paul Krugman has said similar things. Many commentators who don’t explicitly endorse tariffs will nevertheless say that if China doesn’t shift toward consuming more of what it produces, the world inevitably will put tariffs on Chinese goods. The “other countries should put tariffs on China” idea and the “China should shift its economy toward domestic consumption” idea are unified in the worldview of Michael Pettis, who has advocated both things. He has been saying that China needs to increase the share of consumption in its domestic economy for well over a decade, and it seems to me that more than anyone, he is responsible for injecting this idea into the discourse. And in an article in Foreign Affairs in December, Pettis laid out a case for tariffs:
Pettis’ views on trade policy, and his whole way of thinking about international economics, has drawn pushback from some economists. For example, in September 2023, Tyler Cowen questioned the focus on Chinese domestic consumption as a target for Chinese growth policy. As an alternative, he suggested that China should focus on improving certain dysfunctional service sectors like health care, which will increase both consumption and production. In November, Pettis vented his frustration with the academic economics establishment in an X thread:
Tyler responded ascerbically:
As you know, any time there’s an economist food fight, especially over macroeconomics, I am here for it! I wish Tyler had elaborated on his criticisms of Pettis’ paradigm, and I also think Pettis is being unfair in his blanket accusations of ideological bias. But in any case, I think I have four points to make on this topic. International economics is really, really hardThe first point is that as far as I can tell, nobody really understands international economics. It’s basically macroeconomics on steroids. There are a huge number of factors that make issues of tariffs, trade surpluses, and the effect of trade on consumption vs. investment very complex. Some of these factors are:
In graduate school, I took a class in international finance. The professor who taught that class was known for using advanced mathematical methods borrowed from engineering to make models in which two different frictions interacted to affect international trade. That was a big improvement over the standard theories that could only handle one friction. But what if you have seven? It’s hopeless. I think that one reason no one has come up with an alternative to Michael Pettis’ ultra-simple way of analyzing international economics is that anything more complex that that quickly balloons into an absolute nightmare. Making big sweeping assumptions about how tariffs will affect production and consumption isn’t exactly the most rigorous or empirically testable way to think about trade and industrial policy, but if the alternative is a blizzard of unworkable math that probably still makes way too many simplifying assumptions, maybe you just go with the simple thing. Also, Pettis’ paradigm isn’t that different from some of the heuristic ideas that orthodox economists have used to analyze trade policy. For example, Ben Bernanke’s |