http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/10/world/asia/10jakarta.html?_r=1&ref=asia

Uneasy Engagement 
China's Economic Power Unsettles the Neighbors 
 
Ed Wray for The New York Times
Cheaper Chinese products have imperiled Indonesian businesses like the Dunia 
Metal Works. 

By MICHAEL WINES
Published: December 9, 2009 
PASARKEMIS, Indonesia - In the Dickensian depths of the Dunia Metal Works here, 
all is cacophony: the bam bam bam of grease-drenched punches; the rhythmic 
clank of unspooling steel wire; the storm and stress of glinting, freshly 
minted nails cascading onto a broad metal table for boxing.


The New York Times
The Dunia Metal Works in Pasarkemis, Indonesia, is running at 40 percent of its 
capacity as its export markets have dried up. 

 
The New York Times
Chinese competition is crushing a factory in Pasarkemis. 

But for all the industrial din, Dunia is undergoing a painful slump. Today it 
runs at 40 percent of its capacity, its domestic nail business imperiled - and 
its exports wiped out - by cheaper Chinese alternatives.

"We have been competing with the Japanese and the Koreans," said Juniarto 
Suhandinata, the factory's director. "But the Chinese - no chance." 

The Chinese are tough competitors, and Dunia is hardly the first to find out. 
But Mr. Suhandinata's lament speaks to something different: a sense of 
disquiet, even in developing Asian nations in Beijing's orbit, over the 
implications of China's swift, seemingly boundless economic growth.

China has long claimed to be just another developing nation, even as its 
economic power far outstripped that of any other emerging country.

Now, it is finding it harder to cast itself as a friendly alternative to an 
imperious American superpower. For many in Asia, it is the new colossus.

"China 10 years ago is totally different with China now," said Ansari Bukhari, 
who oversees metals, machinery and other crucial sectors for Indonesia's 
Ministry of Industry. "They are stronger and bigger than other countries. Why 
do we have to give them preference?"

To varying degrees, others are voicing the same complaint. Take the 10 
Southeast Asian nations in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, known as 
Asean, a regional economic bloc representing about 600 million people. After a 
decade of trade surpluses with Asean nations that ran as high as $20 billion, 
the surplus through October totaled a bare $535 million, according to Chinese 
customs figures, and appears headed toward a 10-year low. That is prompting 
some rethinking of the conventional wisdom that China's rise is a windfall for 
the whole neighborhood.

Vietnam just devalued its currency by 5 percent, to keep it competitive with 
China. In Thailand, manufacturers are grousing openly about their inability to 
match Chinese prices. India has filed a sheaf of unfair-trade complaints 
against China this year covering everything from I-beams to coated paper. 

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, the biggest regional group, last 
month urged the adoption of "market-oriented exchange rates" for Asian 
currencies without mentioning - or needing to mention - China's currency, which 
many economists say China keeps artificially undervalued to promote its own 
exports.

In Southeast Asia, Indonesia is having second thoughts about a free-trade pact 
China negotiated with the six core Asean nations.

Under strong pressure from industries as varied as steel and motorbike makers, 
the Trade Ministry said last week that it would seek to renegotiate some of the 
350-odd tariff reductions that were envisioned in the first year of the accord, 
set to take effect in January.

Jong-Wha Lee, the chief economist for the Asian Development Bank, noted that 
Japan and South Korea were also seen as juggernauts - and were criticized - 
when their state-backed industries rapidly increased exports. But the challenge 
from China seems different.

"Not just the size, but the speed of China's emerging power is really 
unprecedented in the region," Mr. Lee said. "So it creates a lot of issues - 
not just trade and exchange-rate policies. But in the future, what will be the 
role of China?"

China has taken some steps to mollify complainers. In April, it proposed a $10 
billion investment fund to help build badly needed roads, railways and ports in 
Southeast Asia, and a $15 billion fund to give Asian nations low-interest 
development loans. 

But it has so far done little to address regional and global unease over the 
value of its currency, the renminbi. Because the currency is lashed by 
effective government fiat to the sinking American dollar, China's exports have 
become significantly cheaper in countries whose own currencies have not 
compensated for the dollar's recent fall.

In Asia, the renminbi is doubly significant. During the 1997 Asian economic 
crisis, the values of many regional currencies collapsed, making their goods 
cheap to foreign buyers. The Chinese then won the gratitude of their neighbors 
- and cast their country as a responsible power - by keeping the renminbi's 
value fixed. That prevented a competitive spiral of devaluations that many 
economists feared might make the crisis much worse.

The latest financial crisis tells a different story: China's exchange rate 
controls are cited as a leading cause of huge global imbalances that 
contributed to the collapse of 2008.

This time, China has resisted pressure to untie the renminbi from the dollar 
and let it rise. And its neighbors' exports have suffered as a result.

Michael Pettis, an economist and scholar with the China program of the Carnegie 
Endowment for International Peace, argues that China can no longer pursue the 
same export-driven development model at a time when Western consumers no longer 
are able to gobble up whatever it and other Asian manufacturers produce.

Until 2008, Mr. Pettis said, "most of these countries ran trade surpluses, and 
the U.S. was the countervailing trade deficit." 

"The entire model depended on the ability of an external agent - the United 
States - to absorb trade deficits," he added.

Indonesia is especially vulnerable to the shift. It is the most populous and 
arguably the least economically advanced nation among the onetime Asian Tigers, 
and perhaps the least able to accommodate itself to a new regional order 
dominated by China. 

Didik J. Rachbini, a professor and the founder of an economic research 
institute here, said that in the past four years, Indonesia had swung from more 
or less parity in bilateral trade to a deficit equal to one-third of its annual 
exports to China - and rising. 

The lowly nail is one focus of tension. Making nails is not complicated: start 
with a bale of steel wire, shave it down to the proper diameter, then feed it 
into a punch that shapes the nail, cuts it and spits it into a bin. Labor and 
machinery account for 10 or 15 percent of the cost of a nail. The rest is the 
cost of the wire.

And that is Indonesia's problem.

"Many Chinese steel factories have overcapacity, so they sell their wire very 
cheap," said Ario N. Setiantoro, who leads the Indonesia Nail and Wire Factory 
Association. "Chinese nails enter the market here at about the same price as 
our wire."

He is right. Most analysts say China has too many steel mills. Its excess 
steelmaking capacity equals the entire annual production of the world's No. 2 
steelmaker, Japan. Every Chinese province wants a steel industry, because it 
conveys prestige, creates jobs and attracts other business. 

Beyond supply, Chinese state-run banks support industry with construction loans 
so cheap that credit can be almost free, holding down operating costs. China's 
vast purchases of iron ore lock in volume discounts that Indonesia's small 
steelmakers cannot match. 

Export markets have dried up.

Like Dunia Metal, Surabaya Wire, a nail maker in east Java, has given up on 
exports altogether. "I used to have 450 workers," said, Sindu Prawira, the 
chief executive of Surabaya. "Now, we have 170. Almost everybody is like that."

Industries everywhere tend to accuse competitors of dirty tricks when they lose 
market share, of course, and Indonesia's anemic steel industry shoulders its 
own share of blame for the nation's competitive problems. 

But as layoffs mount, the Indonesian government has been forced to try to shore 
up ailing producers.

In October, Indonesia's Trade Ministry invoked World Trade Organization rules 
and slapped a 145 percent safeguard tariff on Chinese nail imports, pending 
negotiations to settle complaints that the Chinese are competing unfairly.

Irvan K. Hakim, a co-chairman of the Indonesian Iron and Steel Industry 
Association, said he had aired those sorts of complaints to Chinese officials 
for years. He did not appear optimistic about a meeting of the minds.

"China is China, you know?" he said, shrugging. "Even the U.S. cannot talk to 
China."


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