President Cyril Ramaphosa was quoted recently in The Star as saying that South Africa would not be bullied by the United States of America when it came to trade relations. He was defending the closer links with China and, of course, with the other BRICS nations and clearly siding with them against America and against President Trump.
The statement by Ramaphosa was no doubt popular in his own party. Many people in the ANC dislike the USA – after India the world’s biggest democracy – preferring the undemocratic world. It seems sometimes that the South African government never meets a one-party state or an undemocratic country that it does not like.
President Trump of the USA has not exactly endeared himself to people in South Africa, Africa or to people around the world, for that matter. Referring to them as “sh.thole” countries was not the way to win their hearts. But presidents come and go and sometimes even the unpopular ones leave a legacy that has merit.
President Xi of China, on the other hand, has headed a push by his country for influence here and elsewhere on the continent and during his visits he has seemed an avuncular figure, friendly towards us and wanting to help South Africa’s drive for foreign investment and for loans.
All of this seems to make sense and few will criticise President Ramaphosa for being cool towards the USA and warm towards China. I wonder, though, how strategic the choice is and whether it will prove to be in our long-term interests.
Don’t simply assume that the USA will lose a trade war. The reason is simple: fair and equitable trade, especially between the USA and China demands that China will adjust many of its practises, its defences, its tariffs, its government subsidies, and its theft of intellectual property, all of which contribute towards making it difficult for the USA to access the Chinese market. The result is an enormous trade gap between the two with Chinese exports to the US in 2017 earning $505 billion, while America earned only $129.8 billion from its exports to China. This imbalance is not sustainable. Just watch China begin to make concessions, even while adopting a tough stance.