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Economy

Mutual trust to guarantee both sides benefit from China's FDI in U.S.(2)

1
2016-04-14 17:00Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

CHINA'S GROWING FDI BENEFITS BOTH SIDES

Fears still linger that Chinese investment could compromise U.S. security interests and lead to job offshoring. However, no such issues have emerged.

"So far we don't see any patterns of deals that don't make a whole lot of commercial sense," said Thilo Hanemann, a director at Rhodium Group who leads the firm's work on global trade and investment, during a panel discussion on Wednesday.

In fact, more Chinese FDI creates more jobs in the United States as the number of Americans employed by Chinese-affiliated companies rose by another 12 percent to 90,000 in 2015, said the report.

The majority of newly added jobs in 2015 resulted from acquisitions, and new Chinese owners tend to expand local employment after the acquisition is done, contrary to fears that Chinese investors could acquire U.S. assets and then move related activities back to China, according to the report.

A case in point: Smithfield Foods added 1,500 workers after it was acquired by China's Shuanghui Group in 2013.

An increasing amount of Chinese FDI also spurs more exports to China, as some Chinese companies use their U.S. operations to export products back home, according to the report.

For example, a 1.85-billion-dollar greenfield facility by China's Yuhuang Chemical in Louisiana, once completed, will export the majority of its methanol back to China.

MUTUAL TRUST IS VITAL

Despite all the benefits that Chinese investment brings to the U.S. economy, rising politicization of the issue in the U.S. presidential elections poses a risk to incoming Chinese investment.

"The first months of the year have produced numerous instances of politicians from both parties issuing dire but ill-founded warnings about Chinese investments, and introducing bills that propose severely clamping down on traditional U.S. openness to FDI," the report said.

Between "a factory owned by an American company that employed 1,000 workers" and "a factory owned by a Chinese company that employed 2,000 workers," only 23 percent of the 1,000 respondents preferred the latter, according to a poll conducted in late March.

Perceived biases should be eliminated to pave the way for both countries to benefit from the momentum of China's increasing FDI flow to the United States.

"We need to make it easier for China to invest in America. Not only would it help invigorate domestic industries, it would also provide a path to greater security. If instead we let our fears lead us to greater isolationism, we will surely lose," said Zachary Karabell, head of global strategy at financial firm Envestnet.

China also needs to be more assertive and explain clearly how the investments help boost mutual trust, said Daniel H. Rosen, founding partner of Rhodium Group.

Meanwhile, Chinese firms should not necessarily feel they are going to be treated differently when investing in the United States.

Amid a gloomy outlook for the global economy, the world's two largest economies need more trust and cooperation rather than skepticism and isolation.

Authors of the report urged U.S. Congress to ensure that "the debate about appropriate responses to Chinese FDI proceeds rationally and does not damage America's reputation for openness."

"In our view, we should not handle the Sino-U.S. strategic relationship with the 'Cold War' mentality. The two economies are highly supplementary with tremendous synergies," said Xu Chen, chairman of China General Chamber of Commerce-USA.

  

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