EAI Fellows Program Working Paper Series No.44
Author Ka Zeng is Professor of Political Science and Director of Asian Studies at the University of Arkansas. Her research focuses on China’s role in global economic governance. Dr. Zeng is the author of Trade Threats, Trade Wars (Michigan, 2004), co-author of Greening China (Michigan, 2011), editor of China’s Foreign Trade Policy (Routledge, 2007), and co-editor of China and Global Trade Governance (Routledge, 2013). She is a contributor to journals such as International Studies Quarterly, Review of International Political Economy, World Development, Journal of World Trade, International Interactions, China Quarterly, Journal of Contemporary China, Social Science Quarterly, and International Relations of the Asia-Pacific.
Abstract
This paper draws on the two-level game approach to analyze the influence of domestic politics on U.S.-China trade disputes in alternative energy, especially in solar energy. It suggests that the difficulty Washington faces in getting China to address market access barriers in renewable energy needs to be viewed in light of both the coalitional dynamics in the U.S. re-sulting from the specific bilateral trade and investment relationship in this sector and Bei-jing’s willingness to use industrial policy to foster economic competitiveness in nascent in-dustries. Specifically, as China occupies the middle of the supply chain in the solar industry, both downstream users of low-cost Chinese imports and exporters of upstream products to China have voiced strong concerns about the U.S.’ trade action. Such domestic opposition, coupled with the importance of industrial policy for defending the country’s long-term in-terests in a “strategic emerging” sector such as alternative energy, substantially constrains Washington’s ability to influence Chinese policies.
China's rapid export growth in recent years has generated heightened tensions in its trade relations with the United States (U.S.), leading Washington to more frequently resort to the dispute settlement mechanism (DSM) of the World Trade Organization (WTO) to address its market access concerns. This paper examines Washington’s efforts to address Beijing’s compliance with its commitments to the Agreement on Trade-Related Invest Measures (TRIMs) in alternative energy, especially in solar energy. It will be suggested that the U.S. has exerted the most intense pressure on China to modify its trade practices in alternative energy in comparison to other TRIMs-related sectors such as automobiles or semiconductors, and yet it has achieved the least success in eliciting positive Chinese responses in this sector.
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