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Issue 6, November/December 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Beyond the Border
Yuan Diplomacy: China, Taiwan Vie in Latin American
Trade Arena
In recent years, much of the talk
in Central America’s business communities has
revolved around competition with China in the garment
trade. In the early 1990s, Chinese apparel exports to
the United States were more than twice those of the
countries that would become part of the Central American
Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA)—Costa Rica, the
Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and
El Salvador. By 1994, these countries had begun to capture
U.S. apparel market share from China and, by 1998, had
overtaken China.
The DR-CAFTA countries’
competitive advantages included trade openings with
the U.S. that China did not share. The U.S. has encouraged
the apparel industry in Central America and the Caribbean
islands through trade arrangements in the Caribbean
Basin Initiative (1985) and related acts and agreements
in 2000 and 2002. However, China’s 2001 entry
into the World Trade Organization increased its competitive
opportunities in textiles and apparel. The following
year, China’s U.S. apparel sales pushed past DR-CAFTA’s.
The competition remains intense.
China’s apparel production costs are only 75 percent
of Nicaragua’s and 62 percent of Guatemala’s.
But the average time required for transporting textiles
and apparel to the U.S. from DR-CAFTA countries is less
than one-third China’s. Overall, the average turnaround
between receipt of an order and delivery to the U.S.
is about four weeks for DR-CAFTA nations and 10 weeks
for China.[1]
Although the DR-CAFTA countries
are going head to head with China in economic competition,
there is reason to think that China may seek ways to
buy their diplomatic cooperation. China has been devoting
considerable effort to economic diplomacy in Latin America.
In 2004, President Hu Jintao visited Argentina, Brazil,
Chile and Cuba. China’s vice president, Zeng Qinghong,
visited Mexico, Venezuela and Peru. Chinese investment
projects in those countries were announced in conjunction
with the visits. These investments seem designed largely
to create stable supply sources to China and to allow
Chinese firms to profit on the supply end. Many of the
announced investment plans involve raw materials production,
metal smelting and transportation infrastructure. Another
Chinese initiative appears to be textile investments
in Mexico—another significant, though waning,
apparel exporter to the U.S.
China’s investments in Latin
America have been small by U.S. standards. But in Brazil
alone, some 50 Chinese firms have already directly invested.
In 2004, 46 percent of total Chinese foreign direct
investment went to Latin American and Caribbean countries.
The new projects are said to be dominated by the Chinese
equivalents of Japanese keiretsu—large business
conglomerates with strong government ties.
China’s Latin American diplomatic
forays and investments may well have political implications
for its future involvement in Central America. It is
no secret that China wants Latin American nations to
break their diplomatic ties with Taiwan. Twelve of the
25 nations that still recognize Taiwan are in Latin
America and the Caribbean. Six of the 12 are in DR-CAFTA.
In some countries, China has already
announced investment and aid plans substantially larger
than Taiwan’s. Last year, Taiwanese newspapers
complained that the new prime minister of the Caribbean
island country of Dominica asked Taiwan for $58 million
in aid and then accepted a package from China for double
that amount. In response, Dominica dropped its diplomatic
recognition of Taiwan. The Taiwanese argue that China’s
financial program for Dominica is part of an ongoing
attempt to discredit Taiwan’s unusually independence-focused
president, Chen Shui-bian. Since Chen took office in
2000, not only Dominica but also Macedonia, Nauru, Liberia
and Grenada have all dropped diplomatic recognition
of Taiwan.
Taiwan’s ties to the DR-CAFTA
countries include announcements of investment plans
in Guatemala and other DR-CAFTA countries. Not to be
outdone by Chinese diplomacy, Taiwan’s Chen made
a 12-day tour of Central American and Caribbean countries
in September. Taiwanese Vice President Annette Lu also
made a diplomatic tour of Central America.
But President Chen’s term
of office ends in 2008, leaving plenty of time for more
Chinese diplomatic efforts at reducing world support
for Taiwan during his administration. It would not be
surprising to see China attempt to make the DR-CAFTA
countries adopt its political perspective. There are
already reports that China plans textile investments
in Central America.
The DR-CAFTA accord includes duty-free
benefits on fibers, fabrics, yarns and apparel made
in member countries, giving DR-CAFTA countries an advantage
over China in selling to the U.S. The tariff savings
might offset some of China’s lower production
costs. Coupled with these factors, political incentives
might be more reason for Chinese textile operations
in Central America.
It is conceivable that the Chinese
might realize a price advantage from the region’s
“spaghetti bowl” of free trade agreements,
perhaps by producing textiles in Mexico for manufacture
into apparel in Central America. This, however, ignores
the Taiwan issue. Investments, whether in textiles or
other industries, could turn up as carrots for DR-CAFTA
countries that consider playing the mainland China side
of the street.
—William C. Gruben
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| About
the Author
Gruben is director
of the Center for Latin American Economics
and a vice president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
Note
- The Emergence of China: Opportunities
and Challenges for Latin America and the
Caribbean, edited by Robert Devlin,
Antoni Estevadeordal and Andres Rodriguez,
Inter-American Development Bank, 2005.
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Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
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