Publications /
Opinion

Back
The Global War of Subsidies
Authors
April 15, 2024

Prior to her visit to China on April 4—her second in nine months—Janet Yellen, United States Secretary of the Treasury, sent a message demanding that the country should not flood the world with cheap exports of clean energy. This would distort global markets and harm workers abroad, she said. According to a senior U.S. Treasury official, China’s excess industrial capacity and the government support that has fueled it were subject of discussion during her meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang.

Current levels of ample idle capacity and consumer restraint are some of the challenges China must address if it is to achieve higher economic growth. Exports, as in the past, may well be the sought-after means of addressing domestic demand insufficiency. Not surprisingly, everyone closely monitors the evolution of the Chinese exchange rate to see if there is any devaluation underway. As well as Yellen, officials from other major advanced economies occasionally refer to a potential flood of Chinese products.

Xi Jinping, meanwhile, has referred to clean energy and other high-tech sectors as the primary path forward for the country’s prosperity. As we discussed previously, China today is ahead of the United States and Europe in technological rivalry in clean energy. It is no wonder, then, that U.S. and European officials make frequent reference to Chinese exports and subsidies in this area.

The fact is that large-scale subsidies have proliferated in a race to subsidize so-called ‘strategic’ sectors. In response to China’s subsidies, the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and CHIPS and Science Act have put in place attractive subsidies for local production of clean-energy products and semiconductor equipment. Volkswagen called this a gold rush when announcing a decision to build an electric vehicle (EV) factory in South Carolina.

On the basis that it is supporting investments to combat climate change and reduce healthcare costs in the country, the U.S. IRA includes huge subsidies in the form of tax incentives, grants, and loan guarantees to bolster manufacturing in the U.S. While some of the subsidies, particularly those related to EV batteries, are available for investments in countries with which the U.S. has some free-trade agreement, their scope and value are lower than those available to companies committing to manufacture within the country.

Similarly, the CHIPS Act aims to subsidize a revival of the U.S. semiconductor industry. The US leads in the sector in terms of core technology and equipment, but mass production of advanced semiconductors occurs mostly abroad (Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and - in the case of manufacturing equipment - ththe Netherlands). The law aims to reduce dependence on Taiwan in the event of a crisis in that country. Expenditures with the IRA alone, originally estimated at $385 billion, are expected to reach $1.2 trillion according to analysts.

The European Union (EU) has responded. The EU expressed almost immediate concern about the IRA, with protests focused on provisions that strengthen domestic production in the U.S. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called for the establishment of an EU Sovereignty Fund (ESF) to directly combat the effects of the IRA.

She stated that the EU needs to consider “how our so-called 'like-minded partners' are proceeding in the ongoing industrial and technological race”. The EU has had to ease rules that limit national government subsidies to industry. For the first time, national governments of EU member states can match subsidies offered outside the EU, if there is a risk of a project of ‘strategic importance’ being relocated elsewhere.

In addition to defending against the IRA, the EU is obviously concerned about China. Its automotive industry is eyeing the penetration of Chinese EVs, production of which, including in Hungary, has already been announced. Declarations of intent to establish trade restrictions in response to Chinese subsidies have been made.

South Korea and Japan have also implemented their own responses to subsidies from the outside. South Korea, after initially describing incentives for EVs and batteries manufactured in the U.S. as a “betrayal”, received updated guidance on the IRA from the U.S. Treasury that extended some tax incentives to them. Japan also obtained a similar agreement, qualifying its EV batteries and components for IRA incentives.

The major battery and semiconductor companies in both countries are planning new factories in the U.S. to ensure they continue to receive U.S. subsidies, as local content requirements under the IRA become more stringent over time. However, both the South Koreans and Japanese have acknowledged that U.S. subsidies also pose a threat to their own domestic industries. Both pursue a dual strategy covering incentives available under the IRA, while implementing their own national subsidy policies to protect key sectors.

Even Australia, which has a free-trade agreement with the U.S. and little industry to protect, has decided to enact a subsidy program seeking to bolster activity in areas such as batteries and critical mineral processing, which are considered strategically significant.

Judging by announcements and initial investments, the effect of incentives on U.S. supply chains has been intense. Mexico—partnered with the U.S. via the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, and therefore a beneficiary of the IRA—replaced China as the largest exporter to the U.S. last year, marking the first time since 2006 that China has not been the largest. There is a realignment of global trade underway.

Any economic evaluation of costs and benefits of these subsidy programs faces an inner difficulty in considering that the sought-after results are not strictly optimal economically. There is a risk that countries, especially the U.S. and China, will adopt increasingly broad definitions of what constitutes a strategic sector, triggering new ‘global subsidy wars’. For countries with no fiscal space to, if they wish, compete in cutting-edge strategic sectors this is bad news.

 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Sous la direction de
    Muhammad Ba
    Amanda Bisong
    Rafik Bouklia Hassane
    Salma Daoudi
    Pierre Jacquemot
    Leo Kemboi
    Jacob Kotcho
    Mouhamadou Ly
    Solomon Muqayi
    Meriem Oudmane
    Mohamed Ould El Abed
    Kwame Owino
    Asmita Parshotam
    Fatih Pittet
    December 29, 2020
    Dès les premiers cas du Coronavirus relevés en Afrique, les prédictions les plus sombres ont été faites sur la catastrophe sanitaire à venir sur le continent, en raison d’un certain nombre de caractéristiques supposées favoriser la propagation de l’épidémie. Ces prévisions ont été démenties par la rapidité des ripostes des Etats et par divers autres facteurs. La progression de la Covid-19 en Afrique n’est pas le fait d’une dynamique unique mais plutôt de multiples profils de risques ...
  • December 29, 2020
    Bien que l’IGAD (Autorité intergouvernementale pour le Développement) ayant initialement été conçue pour un mandat restreint de promotion de la coordination des approches nationales en matière de développement, pour atténuer l’impact de la sècheresse et de la désertification, les questions de paix et de sécurité ont finalement été intégrées comme piliers de l’Institution au nom de l’impact bénéfique de la stabilité et de la sécurité sur le développement des pays de la région. Les ré ...
  • Authors
    Salma Daoudi
    December 25, 2020
    The maxim that in adversity we find unity has never truly materialized following the outbreak of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19). Despite fighting a common enemy, individual societies have turned inwards, moved by a self-preservation instinct that prioritizes individual over collective well-being. Outbursts and demonstrations of solidarity have punctuated national and international responses to COVID-19, but the virus has also often exacerbated structural inequalities, reopening ol ...
  • Authors
    December 23, 2020
    This article was originally published on Bruegel  A recovery from the COVID-19 recession is underway though the suffering is far from over, especially for the most vulnerable. Inequality is both a consequence of the pandemic and a cause of its severity. Many countries need comprehensive policy change to address its worst effects. At the end of a tragic year marked by pandemic and increased poverty, the miraculously rapid arrival of vaccines stirs great hope. The COVID-19 recession ...
  • Authors
    December 22, 2020
    After reaching a peak against other currencies in March this year, the dollar fell by almost 15% until the beginning of December. According to Bloomberg, asset portfolio managers have been assuming "short" positions against the dollar, that is, betting on its fall ahead. The dollar is expected to devalue against the euro, the yen, and the Chinese RMB in 2021. The peak last March, during the coronavirus financial shock, reflected the search for a safe haven in short-term US bonds or ...
  • Authors
    Inácio F. Araújo
    December 18, 2020
    We estimate the contents of services value-added incorporated in goods exports in different countries in Latin America, exploring the local dimension of the results. We use inter-regional input–output analysis to trace and map domestic value-added embedded in those countries' exports. We add to the discussion of global value chains the internal, within-country geography of trade in value-added, since the set of locational preferences that help understanding the spatial patterns of n ...
  • Authors
    December 18, 2020
    Avec du suspense jusqu’à la dernière minute, comme l’Union européenne (UE) aime le faire, le 10 décembre 2020 le Conseil européen a finalement donné son accord pour le budget de l’Union 2021-2027 (1,8 milliards d’euros[1]) et du Fonds de récupération et de relance pour faire face aux conséquences économiques et sociales de la Covid-19 dans les pays de l’UE. Le Fonds répartira entre les États membres 750 milliards d’euros entre 2021 et 2023 (sous le nom de « EU Next Generation »), 36 ...
  • Authors
    Márcio Issao Nakane
    December 17, 2020
    Brazil is one of the countries hardest hit by COVID-19. Apart from the dramatic health implications, COVID-19 will also scar the Brazilian economy, including through a jump in its already high public-sector debt-to-GDP ratio in 2020. Moving forward—or not—with structural reforms aimed at lifting private investment will define whether a sustainableor unsustainable—growth-cum-debt trajectory will prevail in the next decade. The extent to which Brazil regains its attractiveness for for ...
  • December 16, 2020
    The COVID-19 pandemic has hit the Moroccan economy hard, as elsewhere in the world. A collapse in external demand and a lockdown lasting more than three months have profoundly altered economic activity in Morocco, causing its first recession since 1995. The implementation of the confinement and social distancing measures was strict and came two weeks after the detection of the first cases of COVID-19 in Morocco on March 2, 2020. The lockdown was extended three times and lasted aroun ...
  • Authors
    December 14, 2020
    L’économie marocaine fait face à une année 2020 extrêmement difficile et complexe. La crise provoquée par le choc de la Covid-19 est singulière, multicanale et fondamentalement différente des crises précédentes. Elle altère le système productif par un double choc d’offre et de demande, amplifié, de passage, par une crise de confiance. Alors que l’année 2020 touche à sa fin, il est crucial de dresser une première évaluation circonstanciée des ramifications de cette crise, qui permett ...