To pursue development by confirming to market rules
By He Yin
“The United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization
(WHO) need our strong support if they are to effectively coordinate global
anti-epidemic cooperation. In the meantime, efforts must be made to strengthen
macroeconomic policy coordination and safeguard the stability of global
industrial and supply chains.”
Chinese President Xi Jinping has put forward the right
solution to maintain stable global economic development in global anti-pandemic
response in a phone call with Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.
The spread of the COVID-19 pandemic has tested the global
industrial and supply chains. Countries need to strengthen solidarity and
cooperation by upholding the concept of building a community with a shared
future for mankind to reduce the disease’s impact on global industrial and
supply chains. This not only helps dispel the dark cloud of the disease, but
also marks a major step toward global economic recovery.
The global industrial and supply chains are the results of
international division of labor and cooperation formed on the basis of
following the laws of the market economy. They are not the private property of
anyone.
Following the trend of trade and investment liberalization
and facilitation, multinational companies involved in economic globalization are
fully practicing principles such as Adam Smith’s theory of free market and David
Ricardo’s theory of comparative advantage.
The flow of capital, labor, technology and other production
factors around the world, and the transfer of them from high-cost areas to
low-cost areas and from high-efficiency areas to low-efficiency areas connect
supply with demand in an effective manner.
The global industrial and supply chains have gradually replaced
the product division and trading models between countries, greatly improving
global production efficiency.
The continuous optimization of the global industrial and
supply chains provides a key impetus for global development, benefiting all
countries, including the developed, the developing, and the poorest.
To constantly create conditions for optimizing the global
industrial and supply chains and better contribute to global development is a
responsibility of global countries to build a community with a shared future
for mankind.
However, for the time being, politicians in certain
countries have claimed to intervene or even reconstruct the global industrial
chain and supply chain because they have brought about “threats” during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Such an argument is contrary to the general trend of
economic globalization and does not conform to the inherent logic of the rule-based
global industrial and supply chains.
Enterprises are the main players in the market. The
government could change economic incentives through tariffs and other tools.
But as long as enterprises still seek the optimal profit at the minimum cost,
economic globalization is unlikely to undergo a fundamental reversal. The
division and cooperation between economies and advantage complementation are
still a basic trend.
“Our China-based data suggests that the majority of our
members will not be packing up and leaving China anytime soon,” said Alan
Beebe, president of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in China.
Beebe’s understanding of the global industrial chain and
supply chain is clearly different from that of some Western politicians who
propose to bring the U.S. supply chain back home at all costs.
According to a latest AmCham survey, the majority of
American companies in China have no plans to relocate production or sourcing
activities to other parts of the country or abroad due to the coronavirus.
U.S. corporate boards are still focused on selling into
China, which remains a large and promising consumer market, and a lot of the
Chinese production that American companies do is already aimed at the local
market, which is one of the ways that globalization may be more robust than
many analysts acknowledge, Bloomberg reported.
The COVID-19 pandemic is a stress test on the resilience of
the global industrial chain and supply chain. Countries now pay more attention
to the overall safety of the global industrial chain and supply chain, as well
as the scientific adjustment to localization, regionalization and globalization
of their strategies.
However, transferring the industrial chain and supply chain
is not as simple as turning on and off the lights. Just to be clear, the
industrial chain and supply chain based on international division of labor have
shaped today’s global production platform and constitute a modern global
economic structure.
Dismantling the global industrial and supply chains and
setting up barriers will have a huge destructive effect. In the short run, it
may lead to inflation; in the long run, excessive government intervention in
business operations will distort market rules and hinder economic development.
Stephen Roach, a senior fellow at Yale University, believes
that political threats to break supply chains and to impose punishment would be
a costly miscalculation, reducing innovation and prosperity.
Only by conforming to the laws of the market can development
be facilitated. It’s noteworthy that China is a vital part of the global
industrial chain and supply chain. After decades of construction and the
practice of reform and opening-up, the country has established the world’s most
complete industrial supporting system that is deeply integrated into the
virtuous circle of the global economic ecosystem and welcomed by the world.
At a time when the world economy is hit by the COVID-19
pandemic, China continues to actively participate in the international division
of labor and work with global partners to maintain the stability of the global
industrial chain and supply chain, making an important contribution to the
stability of the world economy and global development.
To pursue development by confirming to market rules
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