On August 31, the Asian
Wall Street Journal reported that China had barred a top
Swiss-American investment bank, Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB),
from making future business deals in China because it had hosted a
Taiwan government-backed investment promotion in Europe and a
conference in Hong Kong. Following this news, two U.S. securities
houses, Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, reportedly cancelled their
plans to provide similar services to Taiwan. While it is not clear
that Beijing's sanctions against CSFB are its first against foreign
banks, one banker in Taipei insists that "it's fairly
unprecedented."
Beijing's move marks the opening salvo in
a new economic boycott campaign against democratic Taiwan that puts
companies at risk of violating U.S. law. The Administration and
Congress must act quickly if they are to preempt further Beijing
pressure on U.S. companies doing business in Taiwan and challenges
to Taiwan's democracy that could escalate into a trade war.
Flagrant
Rhetoric
According to a recent article in the Financial Times , China's top securities
regulator explained its action by asserting, "if you have some
foreign company that supports the forced overthrow of the Chinese
government, we do not do business with them." He added that CSFB's
services to Taiwan "go against the very principle [of `one China']
and treats Taiwan like a country." It is, of course, absurd on its
face to charge that CSFB supports the "forced overthrow of the
Chinese government" simply because it handled a contract for the
Taiwan government. Moreover, the U.S. Taiwan Relations Act of 1979
(P.L. 96-8) mandates that Taiwan be treated like a country and
states that economic boycotts are a matter "of grave concern" to
the United States.
Why It Qualifies
as a Boycott
The Export Administration Act (EAA) of 1979 (P.L. 96-72)
defines a boycott as countries' or companies' "refusing, or
requiring any other person to refuse, to do business with or in the
boycotted country...pursuant to an agreement with, or requirement
of, or a request from...the boycotting country." The Bureau of
Export Administration has noted that the law "encourages, and in
some cases, requires U.S. firms to refuse to participate in foreign
boycotts that the United States does not sanction." This includes
agreements in which they refuse to do business with companies
blacklisted by a foreign boycotting nation--so-called secondary and
tertiary boycotts.
U.S.
anti-boycott laws provide for the imposition of sanctions against
countries that launch such hostile action against America's friends
and allies, and they prescribe both civil and criminal penalties
against foreign and domestic companies that participate in such
boycotts and fail to report them. Political boycotts in situations
that are no threat to national security run counter to the rules of
the World Trade Organization (WTO), to which both China and Taiwan
will seek formal admission at the General Council meeting in Qatar
in November.
Section 2(b)(4) of the Taiwan Relations
Act declares that "it is the policy of the United States
to...consider any effort to determine the future of Taiwan by other
than peaceful means, including by boycotts
or embargoes , a threat to the peace and security of the
Western Pacific and of grave concern to the United States."
(Emphasis added.) Indeed, the conference report on the Taiwan
Relations Act (Report No. 96-71) explicitly mandates that, under
the provisions of this section, "Taiwan shall be considered a
`friendly' country under the anti-boycott provisions of the Export
Administration Act." Congress correctly foresaw a Chinese campaign
of "secondary and tertiary boycotts" against Taiwan as a
non-peaceful alternative to outright military action.
China's attempts at a new economic boycott
of Taiwan represent a dangerous escalation of non-peaceful pressure
on Taiwan and, under Section 3(5)(A) of the EAA, qualify as a
classic secondary boycott and "restrictive trade practice" against
"a country friendly to the United States." It is not difficult to
predict that if Beijing's latest moves to intimidate foreign banks
from doing business with Taiwan are successful, the next targets
could be U.S. defense and technology firms.
How the U.S.
Should Respond
The Administration and Congress must move quickly to
prevent China from increasing economic pressure on Taiwan that
would negatively affect U.S. businesses. The inevitable result
would be a trade war. The most important steps for Washington in
the near future should be to:
- Remind Beijing
that U.S. law regards an economic boycott against Taiwan as a
matter "of grave concern." To demonstrate its concern, at
the very least, the Administration should be prepared to scale back
official exchanges with China's securities regulatory bodies. The
President should be prepared to express this "grave concern" during
his summit with Chinese President Jiang in October. Treasury
Secretary Paul O'Neill should also express this concern at the
upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum ministerial
meeting in Suzhou, China.
- Begin to
monitor, as required by the EAA, whether any U.S. persons or
businesses have reported requests from Chinese entities to
participate in such boycotts against Taiwan. The U.S.
Department of State should make clear to U.S. firms doing business
in China that aiding Beijing's boycott is illegal.
- Consider
additional anti-boycott legislation that protects U.S. companies,
especially defense and technology firms, from Chinese
pressure. Such legislation should explicitly prohibit U.S.
companies from complying with China's boycotts of firms doing
business with the Taiwan government. A review of anti-boycott
legislation designed to counter the secondary Arab boycotts against
Israel provides a basis for such legislation.
- Consider new
disincentives to participate in Chinese boycotts of countries
friendly to the United States. One powerful disincentive
to investment banks against joining a Chinese boycott of Taiwan
would be legislation that denies boycott participants the right to
be primary dealers in U.S. Treasury securities.
The
mere prospect of congressional consideration of special Taiwan
anti-boycott legislation should quickly focus Beijing's attention
on the gravity of U.S. concerns. It should also convince Beijing to
step back from a policy that could result in a contentious trade
war.
--John J. Tkacik is
Research Fellow for China, Taiwan, and Mongolia in the Asian
Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.