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China Can't Cut Its U.S. Trade Surplus by $200 Billion

China Can’t Cut Its Trade Gap by $200 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- The great thing about large numbers is they can get so huge that you can bamboozle people by chucking them around.

That’s the best way to view Beijing’s reported offer to reduce its trade surplus with the U.S. by $200 billion (the country's foreign ministry cast doubt Friday on whether such a proposal had been made). In the context of economies with a combined gross domestic product in the region of $30 trillion, it looks like a rounding error. The trouble comes when you try to work out where the reduction will come from.

China Can't Cut Its U.S. Trade Surplus by $200 Billion

Consider, for instance, that the U.S. exported $154 billion of goods to China in 2017, and imported from it $431 billion. Taking $200 billion off that deficit would involve either more than doubling U.S. exports, almost halving its imports, or some combination of the two.

To be sure, there are some trade categories that have seen spectacular growth in recent years. China is scouring the world to feed its voracious energy demands, and the U.S. began exports of crude oil and liquefied natural gas only in the past few years.

The U.S. was the fastest-growing major crude exporter to China last year, with a 1,476 percent improvement on 2016 that saw its volumes leapfrog those of Malaysia. Strengthening consumption and flatlining output from domestic fields is likely to continue pushing up China’s oil imports, with the International Energy Agency estimating that demand will increase by about 2 million barrels a day by 2023, equivalent to about a fifth of U.S. output.

It’s a similar story with natural gas. Long a laggard in methane consumption, China is fast turning into the big beast of the global liquefied natural gas market, with import volumes doubling over the past two years. That trend is only getting started: Domestic gas prices rallied as much as 32 percent in the past three weeks, a remarkable indicator of supply tightness given it’s almost summer.

China Can't Cut Its U.S. Trade Surplus by $200 Billion

LNG consumption will rise by 23 percent a year from 2016 to 2020, taking imports to 61.2 million metric tons annually from 26.2 million tons in 2016, according to Wood Mackenzie, a consultancy. Total regasification capacity will rise to more than 100 million tons a year in 2022, at a time when U.S. liquefaction capacity will be approaching 70 million tons a year, according to the International Gas Union

The trouble is, that will barely move the needle. Let’s assume for the sake of argument that the U.S. supplies every additional barrel of oil consumed by China between now and 2020. The additional 400 million-odd barrels, at mid-2020 Brent futures prices of around $70 a barrel, gets us $28 billion closer to Beijing’s $200 billion target. Assume that the U.S. supplies every additional ton of LNG under Wood Mackenzie’s estimates at current import prices of $500 a ton and you can add another $17.5 billion. Even doubling prices for each commodity gets less than halfway to $200 billion.

There’s nothing else out there that can make the numbers stack up. Even if the U.S. were to increase exports of every billion-dollar trade category to its maximum level of the past decade, that would still chip only $23 billion more from the total. As Council of Foreign Relations senior fellow Brad Setser pointed out on Twitter, a reclassification of semiconductor exports to Hong Kong would result in an easy win, given they’re mostly re-exported to mainland China – but beyond that there’s little that can have a major impact:

China Can't Cut Its U.S. Trade Surplus by $200 Billion
Brad Setser@Brad_Setser
4a) semiconductors are the most interesting in some ways. US sold $6b to China, out of around $50b in exports glob… twitter.com/i/web/status/9…

Sent via Twitter Web Client.

View original tweet.

With the threat of a trade war looming, it’s tempting to take whatever we can get to avert the self-destructive course the world is now on – whether it’s a cut in auto tariffs that won’t really help U.S. auto companies, a Chinese government loan to a Trump-connected resort development, or the promise of some unlikely trade number in the unspecified future. Just don’t expect these fantasy league numbers to be translated into reality any time soon.

To contact the author of this story: David Fickling at dfickling@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Matthew Brooker at mbrooker1@bloomberg.net.

  1. The market-share ambitions of the biggest LNG exporters Qatar and Australia, as well as the constraints of moving tankers through the Panama Canal, make that an unlikely prospect.

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