to an all-time high after damage to production in the world's key exporting countries from simultaneous droughts...Dry weather has led to low yields in India, Kenya, and Sri Lanka. The output fall in the three countries, which account for half the world's exports, will exacerbate last year's market deficit.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
The global tea party
Monday, March 30, 2009
Gallows humor
The Maliki government is putting the screws to the Awakening movement (for those who just arrived, that's a mainly Sunni group of about 100,000 people, many of them former insurgents, who in late 2006 and 2007 arrived at ceasefires with the U.S. military presence in Iraq). The American plan was to integrate 20,000 members...into Iraqi security forces, and help the rest find other work...But the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government never really like the idea. Indeed, the first deals were cut by U.S. officials behind the back of the Iraqi government...I think Maliki's gambit is to crack down on the Sunnis while American forces are still available in sufficient numbers to back him up. This is turning into a test of strength, Sunni vs. Shiite.
We're famous in China. Oh, wait...
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Latin America Update
Ecuador, by slapping new tariffs on 627 imports, has become the global protectionism posterboy, including mentions in a new WTO report, a World Bank report, and The Economist, as well as lengthy features in the Washington Post and Independent.
Colombia and Panama still have free trade agreements pending with the US. The Obama administration and key members of Congress have signaled a willingness to bring them up, if there is progress on eliminating tax havens in Panama and creating benchmarks for enforcing labor protections in Colombia. The Post interprets this as a toughening of US trade policy, but it may just be the only realistic way to make progress in the current economic and political environment.
Panic and Pandemic
Two factors fed this panic: an unstable government and irresponsible media. First, true to their nature, the politicians sought to use the boy’s death to promote themselves and discredit others. Instead of properly investigating the boy’s death and initiating a thorough vaccination campaign, they squabbled like they’ve been doing since the Orange Revolution. So accurate information was not made available, and vaccinations expired before a campaign could be launched.
While the public did not get any accurate information, they were inundated with rumors and drivel, because those types of stories sell. The most popular misinformation: the boy's death was caused by an Indian-made measles and rubella vaccine, which also sterilizes men as part of a plot by Ted Turner, whose charity paid for the vaccines. Why Ted Turner would want to sterilize Ukrainians, I’m still not sure. How would that be good for business? If there were more Ukrainians, he could rationalize opening a chain of Montana Grills in Kyiv. But I digress.
This most recent side effect of political instability and unreliable media causes much cause for concern. In the early 1990s, Ukraine experienced an economic crisis and didn’t really get vaccinations to the public. Combined with the scare, UNICEF estimates that almost 9 million Ukrainians need vaccinations. Since 2000, there have been two major outbreaks of measles, and experts predict another larger outbreak. Moreover, with freer visa regulations established in the last couple years, more Europeans are traveling to Ukraine, and more Ukrainians are traveling to Europe.
Thus the possibility of exporting an outbreak is more and more likely. In this blogger’s opinion, it’s incredibly important that the EU and international organizations work with the Ukrainian Ministry of Health to start a campaign that will convince the public of the importance of vaccinations. Barring that, perhaps they can launch a campaign giving Ted Turner more credibility.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Buying bras shouldn't be this complicated...
As a result of labor policies aimed at preventing women from dealing with male customers, women are not employed as salespeople. This means that in lingerie stores men end up talking to women about bras/thongs/etc and checking out their bodies to determine cup sizes. On top of that, fitting rooms are banned in the kingdom, since women undressing in the close vicinity of a man is unacceptable.
Not only does this not make sense in ANY way when you consider the conservative nature of Saudi society, (in a gender-segregated society, why would men not be banned from lingerie stores?), but even in the US and Europe, men typically do not sell lingerie to women. Well, as they say in the Arab-world, HALAS! Enough!
The boycott was launched on Tuesday by approximately 50 women who gathered at the Al-Bidaya Breast-feeding Resource and Women's Awareness Center in Jeddah, run by founder Modia Batterjee. The aim of the boycott is to pressure the government to IMPLEMENT a law that has been in existence since 2006, which mandates that only women can be employed in women's clothing stores. Reem Assad, a finance professor at Dar Al Hekma College in Jeddah says: "We are raising awareness and calling for the implementation of the law." Assad started a Facebook group which now has 1,680 members, and posted an online petition which has at this point been signed by 1,700 people.
Since only a few Saudi papers have written about the boycott, it has depended largely on word-of-mouth and the internet. The women who launched this campaign knew how to leverage online communications and social media to disseminate their message quickly and effectively. The impact of the campaign remains to be seen, but I am curious to see how else Saudis will chose to utilize new and social media to initiate these types of activities in the Kingdom.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Doing business with the World Bank
A useful resource for all young entrepreneurs.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Soft power vs. hard power
The US is the world’s pre-eminent military power, but the economic benefit of
that is hard to see...In the modern world, there is no observable relationship
between size of country and its standard of living. Small and large countries
are found among the rich and among the poor...Economic power is based on monopoly derived from being the only seller of a particular good or service, or on monopsony derived from being the only buyer. Such power is held by individuals and businesses, not by states. Dominance of an industry or activity is not the same as scale, though scale and dominance are loosely related. International trade is conducted by individuals and businesses, not governments, and it is individuals and businesses, not governments, that negotiate the division of the value added trade creates. The principal economic role of states is not to get in the way. They can impede the process of adding value through trade, protectionism or disruptive currency interventions. These actions damage their own businesses even more than they damage the businesses of other countries.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
A visual explanation of Geithner's two-pronged plan
The inflation hedge of choice
The Fed's actions are an attempt to literally shock life into the credit markets. It may also have the convenient effect of driving down the cost of government borrowing. However, the Fed runs the very real risk of stoking a very big inflationary problem down the road. Weimar Republic the US is not, but the money supply is growing at such a rapid rate that the Fed had better hope the US economy rebounds this year. Remember central bankers, there are unintended consequences to such dramatic monetary easing; like say, a housing bubble (Mr Greenspan, I'm looking in your direction).
What then are some of the likely consequences of the Fed's policy innovations? For one, the dollar was the big loser last week; in fact, it registered its worst week against the major currencies in 24 years. This fed into an accelerating rally in commodities, the moment's inflation hedge of choice. The benchmark S&P GSCI index was up 8% last week. Or take copper, up some 28% this year, a feat completely divorced from the underlying fundamentals. Though, the FT has an article this morning on the actions of a "secretive" Chinese state institution stockpiling copper supplies (which sounds like the perfect plot for Bond film). Oil is back over $50, supported by the OPEC cuts, but boosted in recent weeks by Fed policy. The speculative inflow into commodities, as an asset class, may be small compared to the bubble of recent years, but it is nonetheless paring the steep losses experienced in the second half of 2008.
The sustainability of this rally is highly suspect. With Chinese growth forecast at 6% for the year, and the G7 contracting by 3.2%, the global recession will depress demand for commodities well into the year (with the possible exception of food, but that's another discussion). However, loosey-goosey monetary policy (as A-Rod would call it) comes at a price, with inflation second only to a loss of confidence in US treasuries. Bernanke has demonstrated that he is willing to throw everything in the Fed's arsenal at the credit markets. Until he wins, expect commodities to outperform as an asset class.
(photo courtesy of Shiny Things' photostream)
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Not a good way to start the week
"The U.S. is in such great danger of backing away from free trade," said Kenneth
S. Rogoff, a professor of economics at Harvard. "The next two years could be a
disaster for free trade."
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Big game hunting
At a recent conference that I attended, one of the speakers borrowed a quote from Ike Eisenhower to great effect: “if a problem cannot be solved, enlarge it.” It occurs to me that this sentiment directly applies to the politics of trade in the United States. The public is divided on whether trade is beneficial to the economy, the 111th Congress has already demonstrated protectionist instincts, and it is increasingly difficult to advocate openness as jobs are lost and the recession deepens. How should President Obama, who understands the benefits of trade, address these political realities?
Enlarge the problem substantially by negotiating a comprehensive free trade agreement with the European Union or Japan. First, such an agreement would have huge economic benefits: EU-US trade flows were worth more than $640 billion in 2008. Export-oriented industries on both sides could be counted on to exert a lot of political pressure for that kind of market access. Second, a USEUFTA would take a very long time to negotiate due to the complexity of the trade relationship and both sides’ preference for high-quality agreements. This would put trade on the backburner for at least several years, which would help diffuse political tensions and give the economy time to recover, thereby mitigating the political influence of import-exposed industries. Negotiating with the EU would eliminate the standards (labor, environmental or otherwise) problem.
There are serious drawbacks to such an approach, such as the fact that it shuts out China, India, Brazil and other developing countries (though if you believe in competitive liberalization, you might argue that this would spur further negotiations.) Perhaps most worrisome, by establishing a substantive parallel system, it could easily undermine the multilateral trading system and provide a final knockout blow to the Doha Round. That would be terrible.
Still, the Obama Administration made it clear in its 2009 trade policy agenda that it would seek more economically meaningful agreements. Indeed, in a lot of ways, it would be better to complete one really big one instead of many smaller ones. Perhaps it’s time for trade policy-makers to consider big game hunting.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Hidden gains from trade - St. Paddy's Day edition
The shamrock (three-leaf clover) is one of Ireland's most recognizable symbols. But demand for "Irish" shamrocks is now so great that the small island nation must import clover seeds from countries like New Zealand, India, and Germany. In 2007, Ireland imported nearly 200 metric tonnes of clover seeds worth $677,864.
Gains from trade, indeed.
Free trade petition
Trade’s most valuable product is peace. Trade promotes peace, in part, by uniting different peoples in a common culture of commerce – a daily process of learning others’ languages, social norms, laws, expectations, wants, and talents.Trade promotes peace by encouraging people to build bonds of mutually beneficial cooperation. Just as trade unites the economic interests of Paris and Lyon, of Boston and Seattle, of Calcutta and Mumbai, trade also unites the economic interests of Paris and Portland, of Boston and Berlin, of Calcutta and Copenhagen – of the peoples of all nations who trade with other.
Introducing...
Mo' Rubles Mo' Problems
Yet, before we start celebrating, we should keep in mind that movements in the ruble have correlated almost entirely with movements in the price of oil, which is really the only marketable Russian export (in addition to vodka, defunct ideology, and depressing literature), and thus the indicator for the overall Russian economy. As crude has now stabilized above $40/bbl, so the ruble has stabilized below the euro-dollar basket of 41. This is a good thing, but it can also create an illusion of stability and economic upturn. Meanwhile, inflation continues to soar in Russia, outpacing other Eastern European countries. While inflation has picked up, salaries, both nominal and real, have been falling, and consumption has dropped sharply – it has even hit one of the most rock-solid sectors of retail! Sadly, many of my friends have recently had to choose between leaving their jobs or taking pay cuts of up to 50% - one friend tells me that her employer has not even paid her in the past 2 months, and she has taken out a line of credit to fund her basic living costs.
This last part is particularly worrying, especially since ruble stabilization has necessitated a significant rise in the already sky-high interest rates for personal and business loans at Russian banks. Faced with double-digit interest rates, Russians have done what many in the former Communist bloc have done over the past few years – take out loans in foreign currency, particularly in Euros, at much lower rates. This was great when emerging markets were booming, but now that currency devaluation has hit, consumers and businesses are struggling to make payments, with the latter raising prices on goods. Already in Russian cities, most real estate rental prices are set in Euros. As small businesses get hit with higher real costs for rent and loan payments, prices continue to rise. Moreover, as confidence in the ruble continues to wane, the desire for holdings (and lending) in foreign currencies grows still.
What is the Kremlin to do? Lowering interest rates on loans below the current 13% inflation rate would effectively mean government subsidization of lending, and would drive further devaluation of the ruble, and price inflation for imported goods. While this could cause a further flight of capital from Russia and could plant the seeds for ‘90s era economic chaos, it could also stimulate lending and growth, if coupled with prudent policy reforms, particularly toward small businesses which are drowning in bureaucracy and corruption. It might also cost the Kremlin less, and be more effective, than continuing to subsidize banks who then speculate against the ruble in the Forex markets. Keeping interest rates high, however, may create the illusion of stability, but will surely continue to stifle growth, and will hurt ordinary Russians most. In any case, winter in Russia may not end for some time to come.
(photo from Alcoyotl's photostream)
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Quantitative easing explained
Exxxxcellent!
The limits affect new hires, not existing holders of work-related visas. And while the amount of TARP money is staggering, the number of companies involved -- generally in the financial services industry -- is relatively small. Only about 1 percent of workers in this industry have H-1B visas.Rejoice you bloodthirsty capitalists, here are a few reasons to celebrate!
- Computer software is a high growth industry with great employment prospects, yet interest in computer science remains generally low. Silicon Valley relies on the H1-B hiring process to find skilled workers.
- Immigrants start companies. See Google.
- Exporting education services helps the US to reduce its global trade imbalances. We still have the best higher education system in the world, but inhibiting the prospects of employment in the US may deter foreign students.
- Backdoor isolationism sends the wrong message to our allies and trading partners. We have much work to do in order to improve our global standing.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Mobile education
For those of you who may chide me right away for my public chattering, read the whole post. But for those of you too lazy, here is a (long) excerpt.
The use of mobile phones has been used for all types of initiatives that typically fall under the umbrella of development work. Text messages have been used to monitor elections and share market prices for milk. As long as mobiles continue to improve daily life, their importance will grow. If monitored correctly, governments can harness this trend to garner another source of foreign and domestic direct investment to gain desperately needed capital. Doubly productive, the explosion of mobile technology also acts as a "leap frog" technology preventing governments from needing to expend huge sums for the development of traditional infrastructure needed for analog phones and land lines.
Despite all their benefits I would argue that cell phones are still underused in the developing world. In areas where education of youth is prevented either by conflict, distance or terrain, or simply a lack of time due to hours spent working, mobile technology can help provide educational materials and resources that may traditionally be unavailable.
It may sound a little unusual, but radio technology was used throughout Australia in the 1950s and 1960s to educate children where Outback distances prevented collective schooling. If countries are really going to ensure universal primary education by 2015, then governments may be better off distributing cell phones than laptops.
All this and more at Youthink!, the World Bank blog where I'm a regular contributor.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
FT Energy Source
I recently discovered FT Energy Source, and it is already one of my regular reads. It brings together all the best energy coverage from around the web and the newspaper itself, while also providing terrific original analysis and behind-the-headlines insight. Its coverage this weekend of the OPEC meeting perfectly illustrates the access and insight it offers.
If you are looking to build on the energy/commodities coverage of zzzeitgeist, I recommend checking out FT Energy Source. After us, of course.
Monday, March 16, 2009
I thought the culture wars were over
Calvinism is back...John Calvin's 16th century reply to medieval Catholicism's buy-your-way-out-of-purgatory excesses is Evangelicalism's latest success story, complete with an utterly sovereign and micromanaging deity, sinful and puny humanity, and the combination's logical consequence, predestination: the belief that before time's dawn, God decided whom he would save (or not), unaffected by any subsequent human action or decision.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
More financial crisis visualizations
Russia Almost Gets Served
We don't wanna Put inFirst, Georgia, disco? Really? Second, very subtle, Georgia, but not subtle enough for the European Broadcast Union. That’s right. The song has been banned from competition as it is too political. The rules clearly state: No lyrics, speeches, gestures of a political or similar nature shall be permitted during the Eurovision Song Contest. But what about Finland’s losing entry in 1982, you ask? Hey everyone’s asking it.
The negative move
It’s killin' the groove
I'm a-tryin' to shoot him
Some disco tonight
Boogie with you
Well sirs and madams, Kojo’s “Bomb out” apparently does not count as political, because it was a message of peace that called for an end to nuclear weapons. And, apparently, a song threatening to shoot someone named “Put in” is not considered an olive branch in the European community. Plus Kojo is rocking out this red leather suit. Now you get served, Georgia!
Friday, March 13, 2009
Trash talk
(Photo thanks to Patrick)
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Facebook goes Arabic
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Atlas fudged
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Everything you ever wanted to know about the gold standard
(HT: The Big Money)
Feeding humanity
Yesterday, Rory made an important observation: the global food crisis isn’t over. Indeed, many of the long-term changes in global food supply and demand haven’t changed since last year’s price spikes. And as the world’s population continues to grow, finding a way to feed everyone will become an increasingly central challenge for humanity.
When it comes to the feasibility of significantly increased food production, I am no Malthusian. The great promise of genetically-modified crops, combined with current low levels of agricultural productivity in most of the developed world, suggest that current yields can be substantially increased. To this end, we should support programs that aim to increase productivity in the developing world through better rural infrastructure, mechanization of agriculture, increased fertilizer use, seed pilot programs, etc. We should also encourage biotechnology research and development in rich countries.
However, agricultural land, like any natural resource, is distributed unevenly. Some countries are better positioned to grow food than others. Because of this, we need to advocate strongly for total liberalization of international agricultural trade. This is the only way to ensure that every country, including those with poor resource endowments, has equal access to market-priced agricultural staples. Let’s not forget that a significant trigger of global food price spikes were temporary export controls enacted by major wheat and rice exporting countries. Improve agricultural productivity wherever possible and work simultaneously toward agricultural free trade.
But agricultural trade liberalization would require an unprecedented degree of global policy cooperation. I am particularly worried that the economic crisis will actually result in a breakdown of international cooperation, which could herald a significant domestic retrenchment of politics. History shows us that globalization is hardly the natural state of international affairs. However, some of the most dangerous problems that humanity faces, like climate change and food security, will require global solutions. If we can’t find a way to cooperate, our shared future will be bleak.
It starts with me, it starts with you, it starts with us.
Since 1911, International Women's Day has celebrated the economic, political, and social achievements of women: past, present and future.
The progress women have made world-wide, and the critical contribution of women to the betterment of their societies in every corner of the world are indisputable.
IWD events are being held all over the world - check them out.
And don't forget: It starts with me, you... us.
The Browser
Monday, March 9, 2009
China encourages consumer spending
Future of capitalism
"These changes will endanger the ability of the world not just to manage the global economy but also to cope with strategic challenges: fragile states, terrorism, climate change and the rise of new great powers. At the extreme, the integration of the global economy on which almost everybody now depends might be reversed. Globalisation is a choice. The integrated economy of the decades before the first world war collapsed. It could do so again."
The food crisis never ended
Combing through the media, it would be easy to assume that the food crisis had long ago subsided as demand for imports, commodity prices and economic growth declined. However, risks to food security and the possibility of famine are still very high in many countries. While food commodity prices have fallen from their record highs in 2007, the US Department of Agriculture forecasts that they will remain above historical levels in 2009. The combination of rising food prices, economic contraction, export/price controls and tight trade credit exposes many vulnerable countries, particularly LDCs, to serious risks of famine, poor crop yields and higher prices coinciding with falling income. This doesn't even begin to include the impact on food production by drought, land degradation and other environmental conditions; the UN recently warned that global food production may fall 25% by 2050.
Given the still prevalent risks, it is disconcerting that less is being done to combat the problems directly. Further, certain policy responses to the financial and economic crises, such as looser monetary policy in the developed world, or expropriation in countries like Venezuela, risk stoking the rising food commodity prices. Which brings me to the real danger on the horizon (beyond, of course, the human cost): that the financial, economic and food crises will reinforce each other in a vicious cycle. A food crisis is a likely second-round affect of the financial and economic crises, which in itself breeds political and economic instability, undermining the recovery process and further destabilizing the global economy.
Policy responses to the financial and economic crises are understandably driven by the need for immediate action; to stop the bleeding, so to speak. But what if the very policies necessary to bring us out of this downward spiral only reinforce it in the medium-term?
(photo from snake.eyes' photostream)
Reid Hoffman
Friday, March 6, 2009
Trade papers worth reading
On Monday, the Obama administration released their 2009 Trade Policy Agenda, outlining their general strategy on trade for the next year. (Never mind that they don't have a USTR yet.) Unless you want to torture yourself, skip the 100+ page report on trade policy in 2008. Trust me, I'm speaking from experience. That said, it's definitely worth reading the five page summary on trade policy going forward at the beginning.
VoxEU has a phenomenal new e-book on the new "murky protectionism". It is absolutely fascinating reading all the way through, but at least have a look at the introduction. I'd write a much longer post on this if I could. Suffice to say that things have gotten worse since the G20 summit in November, and they could get much, much worse if things don't change.
Go check them out. I want a report on my desk by Monday morning at 8am.
Should I stay or should I go?
Kind of like Martin Wolf wondering out loud whether Obama's presidency has already failed. And that was a month ago! Think of everything that's happened since then.
Er, actually, maybe it's best not to think about...
Quantifying culture
One interesting bit of research suggests that "group values" cultures will export products that don't require as much impersonal contract enforcement, and thus values is part of what makes you specialize.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Afghanistan: the weak link in a stronger global chain?
NATO announced today that it was restoring high-level contacts with Russia. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that, amongst others, Afghanistan was an issue of "mutual concern." She also expressed her support for a conference on Afghanistan that would bring together all of the key stakeholders in the region, including Iran. From the BBC:
"If we move forward with such a meeting, it is expected that Iran would be invited as a neighbour of Afghanistan," she said.
The challenges posed by Afghanistan are shared by each country in the region (whether there by geography, choice or military alliance). Beyond the obvious interest of each stakeholder in the country's success, Afghanistan may provide the conduit for a diplomatic thaw in US-Russia (a "reset"), US-Iran relations (a handshake, maybe?). Stay tuned...
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Marketplace of Ideas
Ecuador and new protectionism
The Washington Times sees the case of Ecuador - what it calls the "the world's most protectionist response to the global economic crisis," with restrictions on "everything from Peruvian shampoo to Chilean grapes and U.S.-made running shoes" - as a bellwether heralding the possible spread of protectionism around the globe.
The combination of falling remittances, its debt default, and plummeting oil prices have put the country in a very difficult spot, but autarky and import substituting industrialization are not the way out.
New protectionism
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
How green is your stimulus?
Why I love Warren Buffett
Participants seeking to dodge troubles face the same problem as someone seeking to avoid venereal disease. It's not just whom you sleep with, but also whom they are sleeping with.
Monday, March 2, 2009
Unsettling news of the day
Can e-readers save newspapers?
The CNN article states that media ownership is "increasingly looking to devices like e-readers to lower costs while preserving the business model that has sustained newspapers and magazines."
Hmm. "Preserving the business model" is not a viable path forward for the print industry. Newspapers currently survive on advertising dollars, and an e-reader can't change the fact that a newspaper is a blunt and inefficient advertising tool. In the long term, advertising dollars will continue to migrate to the internet where technology provides highly targeted advertising with measurable statistics. Newspapers need to find new revenue streams outside of advertising dollars to survive and I doubt that increased subscription revenue combined with lower costs can save the industry.
I'm also skeptical that print subsribers will embrace e-reader technology. E-readers offer a superior reading experience that eases eye strain, better portability when compared with laptops or even print newspapers, and instantaneous access to content via wireless network connectivity. However, the Hearst product will launch 12-18 months late to market after strong Kindle sales. Will customers want a specialized 8.5 by 11 inch e-reader just for periodicals when they may have already bought one for books?
Anyways, if Steve Jobs is right, newspapers are facing far more serious problems than declining revenue ...
Hello G20, goodbye G7
The party's over
Photo from MatthewBradley's Photostream
Sunday, March 1, 2009
The Crisis of Credit Visualized
How not to build foreign investor confidence
Obviously, the risks posed to foreign investors have increased substantially since Morales gained power in 2005. This uncertainty has resulted in a 75% decline in foreign investment since 2006. But amidst the commodity price and credit collapse of 2008, Morales seemingly realized that the Bolivian government could not fund, explore, extract and manage its natural resource wealth without foreign involvement. State-owned and private Bolivian firms simply lacked the expertise and capital to maximize the country's production/export potential. A number of public assurances and overtures last fall led some to adopt a more optimistic outlook on the role of foreign investors in the Bolivian economy.
Well, if the referendum itself didn't temper this optimism, February 10 sure did. One day after saying that the government would encourage foreign investment in the natural gas sector, the energy minister announced the central government's intentions to nationalize 4 of the power sector's largest companies, including Empressa Electricia Guarachi SA, majority owned by British firm Rurelec Pc.
February 9: Open for business!
February 10: No soup for you!
At this rate, Bolivia better hope General Motors' restructuring includes a whole lot of electric cars, because their mining, natural gas and power production is in a bit of trouble.
(photo: germeister's photostream)
Russia and China: a Power House or Broken Home?
Most recently, the countries displayed extraordinary economic cooperation. Russia secured $25bn in loans from China in return for supplying oil for the next 20 years. This deal is the largest trade financing agreement between the two countries to date: Russia desperately needs money and China desperately needs oil. Everyone’s happy, right?
Not exactly. Days after the historic agreement, a Russian warship opened fire on a Chinese cargo ship and sunk it. The two countries' foreign ministries blame each other. But Clifford Levy of the New York Times actually blames deteriorating bilateral relations. Why?
While both countries enjoy honoring agreements that are mutually beneficial (economic cooperation) or mutually benign (language exchange), Russia and China have a tendency to disregard cooperation when it affects domestic politics. Levy likens the sinking of the Chinese cargo ship to last year’s Russian-Georgian conflict. China didn’t support Russia because Russia recognized the autonomy of South Ossetia, and China didn’t want to encourage Tibet’s or Xinjiang’s calls for autonomy.
What's clear is that Russian-Chinese relations are only as simple as each country’s domestic politics, which is to say they're not all that simple. Notably, Russia and China don’t have an alliance or even an established method to resolve disputes and disagreements. They just have a mechanism for cooperation, which can be honored or ignored at either country’s whim. Hopefully, ignoring the cooperation won't lead to any more drowned sailors.