In trade war talks, China may want US agricultural imports, but what it needs is food security
- Washington and Beijing should know that a deal to end the trade war that increases Chinese reliance on US agriculture and US farmers’ dependence on Chinese markets is actually a lose-lose
Data for 2017, released last year by the Ministry of Natural Resources, measured China’s total arable land at 134.86 million hectares (333.25 million acres), down by 60,900 hectares (150,490 acres) from 2016. At the same time, land used for construction increased by 534,400 hectares (1.32 million acres) in 2017 to reach 39.59 million hectares (98 million acres).
Environmental damage caused by the rapid pace of industrialisation has adversely affected the food-producing capabilities of some areas.
In reality, China recognises the necessity to import food while seeking to avoid too much dependency on any single supplier.
China’s policymakers will be fully aware that back in the 1980s, the United States targeted the food security of the USSR, initiating a partial grain embargo, following the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, while still adhering to the terms of the long-term agricultural agreement signed by Washington and Moscow in 1975.
Under that agreement, which did not expire until September 1981, the Soviet Union contracted to buy at least 6 million metric tonnes of US corn and wheat per annum, but with the right to increase that yearly purchase to 8 million metric tonnes in total without the need for further consultations.
When US president Jimmy Carter signed an executive order in January 1980 placing a partial embargo on US grain sales to the Soviet Union, the agricultural agreement was exempted.
Yet, as evidenced in a document partly declassified by the CIA in November 2011, a February 1981 background paper on the grain embargo, produced for the Reagan administration, shows “the partial grain embargo was imposed in January 1980 as the centrepiece of a sanctions package designed to impose significant costs on the USSR in retaliation for its invasion of Afghanistan”.
Ronald Reagan, though no friend of the USSR, rescinded Carter’s order in April 1981, having argued during his election campaign that Soviet success in accessing alternative supplies meant that the only real losers from the partial grain embargo were US farmers.
In reality, having seen that Washington was prepared to target the USSR’s food security, Moscow subsequently sought to avoid over-dependency on US grain, even though the long-term agricultural agreement itself continued to be renewed at regular intervals.
Provisions covering agriculture will necessarily form a prominent part of any China-US trade deal but neither side, although for different reasons, may wish to encourage too much co-dependency in this area.
Beijing may well conclude that over-reliance on the United States, as a source of food imports, is inconsistent with China’s long-term interests. Food security matters.
Neal Kimberley is a commentator on macroeconomics and financial markets