Extracts.

China's Entry into the WTO: What Lies Ahead
China's Entry into the World Trade Organization, expected to take effect on
Dec. 11, is a monumental move toward economic integration worldwide. It will
create new sets of business winners and losers for years to come. But
perhaps more important, it presents a fresh opportunity for governments,
industries and individual companies to reshape the very nature of the global
economy. In a report prepared in collaboration with journalists from
Beijing-based People's Daily Online, writers from Knowledge@Wharton
interviewed a number of experts for their assessment of what lies ahead for
China. 
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Wharton management professor Marshall Meyer was in Beijing meeting with
Chinese executives the day China's entry was approved at the full meeting of
the WTO in Qatar. "In typical Chinese fashion they were low key about it,"
said Meyer. "They approach WTO with trepidation. Arrogance was not expressed
in that culture. The attitude I picked up is, 'We're a little apprehensive
about it.'" 
News reports from China confirm that impression. Unlike two other historic
nights in China this year, July 13 and October 7 - when thousands of people
held carnivals to celebrate Beijing's successful bid to host the 2008
Olympiad and China's victory in securing a ticket to the World Cup - there
were no fireworks displays or galas on Nov. 10.
>From the president of China to university students, Chinese people consider
China's entry into the international trade body to be a double-edged sword.
"As a member of the WTO," said President Jiang Zemin, "China will have
precious opportunities as well as great challenges."
Chinese economist Wu Jinglian suggested that these opportunities are, in
fact, down the road, while the challenges are more immediate and demanding.
But if Chinese enterprises and government agencies play by the rules of the
WTO, he added, this "will surely drive administrative and corporate reforms
forward." Another leading Chinese economist, Li Yining, pointed to economic
sectors such as financial services, manufacturing and agriculture which he
expects will "accelerate the reform process."
N. T. Wang, a senior research fellow at the East Asian Institute of Columbia
University, in an interview with Fang Cui, editor of the English edition of
People's Daily Online, maintained that China's integration into the
international trading system was "inevitable. China is a major economic and
political power," said Wang. "It is the seventh largest country in terms of
foreign trade and the second largest in foreign direct investment. It has
had strong economic ties with the United States and many European countries.
It should join in the multilateral system."
China has already been an active member in other international
organizations, he added, citing the United Nations, the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank. As for the overall impact of China's
entry, Wang said "the country will suffer from economic, political and
social unrest in the short term. But it will not collapse. Above all, China
has a competitive edge in the world market. The past 20 years have clearly
demonstrated so. After joining the WTO, China will draw capital, technology
and management experience from the multinationals. And China's labor costs
are relatively low, about one tenth of that in the United States and much
cheaper than in Japan and Hong Kong."
Thomas Bernstine, a politics professor at the School of International and
Public Affairs of Columbia University, who was also interviewed by Fang Cui,
predicted that the WTO accession will have "a great impact on China's
political reform. Post-WTO, the Chinese political system will be under much
more pressure, and the market will force governments and other institutions
to apply [the rules of fair play]." At the same time, he added, "China is a
not a banana republic and it will control how transnational corporations
operate." 

The WTO As Crowbar 
According to Meyer, one case for China's concern for the future is that
Chinese companies are small by global standards, which could put them at a
disadvantage when competing with large Western multinationals at home and
abroad. "Even though China is a huge country with a rapidly growing economy,
the size of the firms, except for the biggest of the state-owned petroleum
companies, is not large by global standards yet."
New foreign competition will be another problem for the country's troubled
state-owned enterprises, he added. These companies, already struggling with
inefficiencies, are likely to face strong competition from abroad that could
drive them out of business. That, in turn, would create social problems for
China since these companies still employ tens of thousands of workers.
But overall, Meyer said, entry into the WTO will be good for China even as
the Chinese have no choice but to move into the global trading regime. "It's
simple," Meyer stated. "The central government, in order to govern, has to
have money." The revenue will come from stronger economic performance based
on greater efficiencies and the free trade standards incorporated in the
WTO. "To improve living standards the Chinese know they need to reform ?The
WTO is the best crowbar they have."
Different types of Chinese companies will be changed by WTO entry in
different ways, Meyer added. For China's large trading firms and industrial
conglomerates, such as the Haier Group, an electronics and appliance firm,
WTO membership will mean greater access to global markets. "The industrial
conglomerates will try to extend outside China, but will face competition
within China." Some companies, which are still controlled by the state, act
like private companies and are learning Western-style business methods that
could position them to do well post-WTO. "Many are Hong Kong-based and Hong
Kong-listed and they will tell you, 'We operate as a private firm,' even
though the ownership is through a holding company controlled by the state."
But for those companies with an eye to the outside, WTO entry will give them
a boost forward. As an example, Meyer pointed to China International Marine
Container Corporation Ltd., a joint venture of two state-owned companies.
CIMC has many international customers and does 90% of its business in
dollars. Its headquarters is in Shenzhen near Hong Kong, its chief executive
has a global mindset and, once free of restrictions on capital accounts,
CIMC will be poised to expand globally. "Companies like this, though few and
far between, are ready to leap at opportunities."
Some Chinese firms, however, will face obstacles in learning to manage
workers overseas, Meyer added. "It will be a new experience for Chinese
managers to hire non-Chinese managers." In Confucian culture, Meyer pointed
out, bosses have a lot more authority than in the West. Executives in China
may struggle over how to direct their country managers abroad. "One of the
things you hear discussed is, 'If I send out country managers do I tell them
to obey me or obey the market?' That's a dilemma. In the West it's a
no-brainer; you do what the market requires."
Those most likely to be hurt by China's entry into the WTO, Meyer said, are
other Southeast Asian nations that cannot compete with China's price
structure which is rooted in its vast labor pool and economies of scale.
"Southeast Asians are quaking in their boots over the prospect of Chinese
entry into the WTO."

A Look at the Auto Industry
Ming-Jer Chen, founding director of the Global Chinese Business Initiative
at Wharton and now a professor at the Darden School of Business, pointed to
the enormous pressures that China's state-owned industries will face as a
result of WTO membership. "Inefficient state-owned enterprises are likely to
become even more uncompetitive. Some may combine or even disappear." On an
industry level, he said, Chinese firms will face tremendous competition in
automobiles while shoes and consumer electronics will remain a strength. As
for telecom, the future remains to be seen because the industry could be
singled out for short-term protection under provisions of the WTO.
A close look at the auto industry in particular gives a glimpse of what's
ahead for the country. According to sources interviewed by Davis Shu,
managing editor, English edition, People's Daily Online, the industry will
be affected in several ways. First is price. The tariff on autos will be cut
from the current 80%-100% to 25%, and the tariff on auto parts to an average
of 10% by July 1, 2006. The first cut will take effect on Jan. 1, 2002.
The import quota on autos starts at $6 billion and will increase 15% every
year until it is cancelled five years later. By 2006, the total tax rate on
autos in the Chinese market will be 50-59%, one-half of the current
122-154%. 
The price of imported autos, especially high-end sedans, is expected to
fall. Recently, the Chinese auto market suffered a decline. In October, a
total of 182,500 autos were sold, a decrease of 14.1% from September, but
still a 6.55% increase over October 2000. The tariff cuts and cancellation
of quotas, though carried out gradually in five years, will give imported
autos a superior advantage in the market.
China's auto companies will face a severe challenge. Many of them may have
to stop operations while even those that survive may not be able to compete
in the high-end market and will begin to produce cheap autos instead. The
auto-parts companies will be even more vulnerable since domestic-made parts
will no longer be required, thus opening the way to competition from foreign
auto parts companies.
Overseas companies will be allowed to handle auto trade directly, and can
participate in such areas as after-sale service, repairs and transportation.
And overseas financial institutions will be allowed to handle care-related
financial services. Finally, joint ventures will be freed from the most
discriminatory measures, such as certain 'China made' requirements. Foreign
companies may increase their shares in the joint venture to a maximum of
50%. 
According to Chen, however, looking at industries does not tell the full
story. "It is more useful to look at �individual companies" which will play
a key role in establishing how business will be conducted going forward. "If
they can pull their act together individually, that will become a very
important driving force for the whole country's transformation." Chen cited
some firms with a strong domestic position, such as Haier and Legend
Computer, which are positioned to use that strength to build a global
company. 
"To me, the significance of China's WTO entry is that we are going to see a
truly global economy emerge," said Chen. "Previously we left out the country
with the world's largest population, so to talk about globalization has not
been accurate." Eventually China will be the acid test for global business
people, the one market that all must master, Chen added. "From my point of
view, China will become the only battlefield where all the major players of
different national origins compete. In the long-term we will all be
winners." 
But there are potential pitfalls for all involved in the massive
cross-cultural economic integration that is to take place, Chen said. One
problem could be what he called "reciprocal readiness." Western companies
must acknowledge that China may move at a slower pace, even as the Chinese
will have to brace for a more compressed Western view of time. "Because of
the limited history of open door policy and the transitional nature of the
Chinese economy, you have to be realistic about your expectations and how
you can make things happen."
Western companies should take careful note, he added. "They overestimate the
practicality of their own business models. That's how problems start to
emerge." Western managers are often frustrated by the bureaucracy and the
time it takes to get projects underway in China. But Chinese businesspeople,
he said, are equally frustrated by the Western focus on quarterly earnings.
"This is the time to think about what it would take to develop a compatible
enterprise system so people can talk in a common language," Chen noted.
"Unless we can find this compatible enterprise situation we will continue to
have these ups and downs."

Insurance, Banking and the Legal System
Insurance is likely to be a key Chinese market for Western companies drawn
to a huge, security-minded population, said Wharton insurance professor Neil
Doherty. Even though Chinese consumers remain divided largely between a
small elite and a vast poor population that cannot afford insurance, there
is a small but growing middle class. Even a slight percentage growth in this
segment could translate into a huge number of new customers, he said.
"The other attractive thing about the Chinese market is that it is
exhibiting growth, there is urbanization and, while the average level of
income is low, there is growth potential." On the downside, however, it will
be difficult for Western companies to make quick progress in China even with
the WTO behind them. "There are cultural barriers and bureaucratic barriers
and expectations about doing a lot of business quickly are often dashed,"
Doherty said. "It does take time and patience. You need a fair chunk of
capital to tide yourself over until you really have your feet in the door
there." 
Many western insurers are already poised to push into the Chinese market,
with the WTO liberalization of regulation of service and financial
industries. A notable example is American International Group. The company
was founded in Shanghai in 1919 and relocated to New York in 1939 as unrest
spread across China and East Asia. AIG was the first foreign firm to go back
into China in 1992.
Meyer said banking could be another Chinese business that will be vulnerable
to foreign competition after WTO. The WTO treaty requires banks to recognize
and write off bad assets, something that remains a challenge for Chinese
banks. "Settling transactions on normal business terms is not always
customary in China," he said. "There are debt chains in which one company
owes another and etc. etc. That's not allowable under WTO ?The banking issue
is a real sticking point. As soon as folks are able to use the deposit and
loan facilities of Western banks they will rush to them. Look at the
experience of Citibank in Japan."
China's entry into the WTO will also mean changes to its legal system, which
actually have been underway for some time already, said Eric Orts, a Wharton
professor of legal studies. "A lot of reformers in China are looking at the
possibility that China's joining the WTO will be a method of continuing the
opening of China's legal system as well as its economic system."
He said there is some concern that China could develop a "dictatorship of
law." "The focus should be on building the legal infrastructure for
business. Not that you can ignore human rights violations, but it's better
to focus on the kinds of things you can solve. You can't expect
American-style constitutional rights immediately."
Orts predicted that the WTO provisions could also prompt a look into the
legal structure of Chinese companies.
On the question of Taiwan (which was admitted into the WTO one day after
China), Orts said China's new legal structure, prompted by WTO entry, could
open the door to a creative way to deal with the issue. While most people
are focusing on the positive aspects of expanding international trade for
both economies, he said there is also a possibility that greater integration
could lead to more conflict.

****



Nepali PM Urges Guerrillas to Continue Peace Talks With Gov't.

Nepali Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba has urged the underground
ultra-leftist guerrillas to continue the peace talks with the government and
resolve the guerrillas insurgency through dialogues, The Kathmandu Post
reported Thursday. 

Nepali Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba has urged the underground
ultra-leftist guerrillas to continue the peace talks with the government and
resolve the guerrillas insurgency through dialogues, The Kathmandu Post
reported Thursday. 

"After agreeing for the fourth round of talks, it is irresponsible and
dishonest on the part of the guerrillas to pull out of the talks, and I
honestly urge them to sit for the fourth round of dialogue and not to
jeopardize it," Deuba told the independent English daily Wednesday night.

Deuba stressed that peace talks are essential for the peaceful solution to
the guerrillas insurgency, adding that it is the guerrillas' duty to ensure
that the bloodbath does not recur in the nation.

The prime minister was referring to the guerrillas' statement to withdraw
cease fire, putting the peace process initiated by the Nepali government
three months ago into jeopardize.

In a statement issued Wednesday night, the guerrillas accused the government
for not creating conducive atmosphere for resolving the problem through
dialogue. 

"There is no relevancy of cease fire in this circumstances and all doors
have been closed to find political solutions," the statement said.

The government and the guerrillas declared cease fire in July this year,
paving way for peace talks.

The three rounds of talks held so far between the government and the
guerrillas remained inconclusive as the guerrillas demanded the
establishment of a republican state, an interim government and a new
constitution, which were rejected by the government.

The guerrillas insurgency has claimed about 1,800 lives, including
policemen, guerrillas members and civilians, since it began in the Himalayan
kingdom in 1996. 

****



Cuba Signs Trade Accords with U.S. Firms.

Cuba has signed trade accords with four United States agricultural
businesses as part of a special scheme for Havana to cope with the effects
of Hurricane Michelle, a business source said on Wednesday.

Cuba  has signed trade accords with four United States  agricultural
businesses as part of a special scheme for Havana to cope with the effects
of Hurricane Michelle, a business source said on Wednesday.

The four agribusinesses have become the first U.S. firms in four decades to
sign trade accords with Cuba.

The representatives of Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM), Cargill,
Riceland Foods and ConAgra were in Havana on Tuesday to sign the agreements
with the Cuban state company, Alimport.

The deals came after Cuba appealed the United States to speed up
authorization so it could buy food and medicines from the United States.

According to the accords, the four U.S. agribusinesses will provide Cuba
with wheat, corn, soy and rice, worth 20 million U.S. dollars.

The agreements are still pending and have to be approved by the U.S.
Commerce Department.

Hurricane Michelle struck central Cuba on November 4, killing five people,
flattening thousands of houses, and severely damaging crops earmarked for
both export and local needs.

Cuba has been subject to a U.S. embargo since President Fidel Castro's 1959
revolution. At present the two countries have no diplomatic relations.

****



Afghanistan Conference to Be Held in Bonn.
 
The meeting site for the U.N.-sponsored talks on the political future of
Afghanistan has been decided, and the Foreign Ministry said Wednesday it
would be in Bonn, not Berlin.

The meeting site for the U.N.-sponsored talks on the political future of
Afghanistan  has been decided, and the Foreign Ministry said Wednesday it
would be in Bonn, not Berlin.

The ministry said the meeting would be held in the guesthouse at Petersberg,
Bonn, from the coming Monday.

The meeting was once planned to be held in Berlin.

Issues including the building of a transition government in Afghanistan will
be discussed at the meeting, which will bring together representatives from
four different Afghan groups, according to the United Nations top envoy for
Afghanistan Lakhadar Brahimi.

Local reports said that the Afghan Northern Alliance and the country's
former king Mohammed Sahir Schah, who lives now in exile in Italy, have
announced to send a delegation to the meeting respectively.

The Foreign Ministry said Germany  would not be the organizer, but only
offer technical support for the meeting, said ministry spokeswoman Sabine
Sparwasser. 

The meeting will be purely an internal Afghan meeting under the leadership
of and hosted by the United Nations, she stressed.

She added that she is expecting 50 to 70 participants at the meeting next
week. 

The decision to hold the meeting in Germany came from the United Nations and
the Afghan groups, the spokeswoman said. She added that Germany has had
close ties with Afghanistan for many years and is a major aid donor there.

The Interior Ministry said the meeting would be held under highest security
level. There have been no indications of terrorist attacks so far, said a
ministry spokesman.

****



Thailand May Consider Sending Peacekeeping Forces to Afghanistan.

Thai Prime Minster Thaksin Shinawatra, who is ongoing his first official
visit to Japan, told Japanese newspaper that Thailand would consider sending
peacekeeping troops to Afghanistan if it was asked to by the United Nations,
the National newspaper reported Thursday.

Thai Prime Minster Thaksin Shinawatra, who is ongoing his first official
visit to Japan, told Japanese newspaper that Thailand would consider sending
peacekeeping troops to Afghanistan  if it was asked to by the United
Nations, the National newspaper reported Thursday.

If the U.N. had a resolution that they needed a peacekeeping force in
Afghanistan and would like Thailand to participate, Thai government would
consider to cooperate, Thaksin said, adding that Thailand had much
experience in peacekeeping activities, especially in East Timor.

Thaksin also showed understanding of the full participation of Japan's
Self-Defence Force (SDF) in U.N. peacekeeping or humanitarian activities,
the Nation said. 










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