'This is our country!': China makes no apologies on the tarmac or at the bargaining table
China seems determined to challenge the old world powers and to act on its own terms
As world leaders descended on high-tech hub Hangzhou last week, Chinese officials left very little to chance.
The city of nine million was to be a stage to showcase China's growing importance. Residents were sent out of town with subsidized "vacations." Roads were cleared, schools and businesses closed, and security tightened.
"It's really going overboard," said Heyan Jiaye, a 25-year-old who stayed in town. "But we have to show our best face."
To many observers, China was showing something else as well — that its growing power is not to be dismissed.
Meanwhile, Chinese security officers wrestled with American media, pushing them back from their usual vantage point. One officer tried to keep U.S. national security adviser Susan Rice from joining the official motorcade.
"This is our country! This is our airport!" he yelled in English.
- Trudeau says protectionist views unlikely to creep into 'optimistic' Canada
- G20 wraps with leaders agreeing to use trade to boost global economy
- Trudeau's China visit: Media navigate unfamiliar sea of protocol
Some dismissed it all as an unfortunate, uncharacteristic misunderstanding. Others, including several diplomats to Beijing, saw it as deliberate, a shocking snub. Obama said the confrontation with the media revealed a difference over "values and ideals," while Beijing blamed the U.S. for the stairs mix-up.
In any case, it seemed to confirm China's determination to challenge the old world powers and to act on its own terms. ("This is our country" has since become a popular refrain on social media here.)
China's rules
Political and business leaders say China is also asserting itself on economic matters.
Speaking to the leaders, Chinese President Xi Jinping called on G20 countries to work together, to move away from protectionism and to lower trade barriers as a way to jump-start a lacklustre world economy.
But for many, it's China that's playing by its own rules. U.S., European and Canadian businesses complain they're unfairly kept out of the Chinese market.
Kutulakos and Canadian farmers point to a dispute over China's canola imports. Beijing buys 40 per cent of the Canadian oilseed shipped abroad, but has threatened to stop unless producers implement much more stringent cleaning guidelines. China says it's a food safety issue, but others suspect Beijing is trying to pressure producers because there's a glut of canola worldwide.
"It's the perfect example of how non-tariff barriers can end up being applied in ways that can make it difficult for somebody abroad who might be already doing business," Kutulakos said.
The Canadian government is still negotiating this issue. During Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's visit to China last week, Chinese officials agreed to delay implementing any new rules.
10,000 jobs
At the same time as China restricts foreign businesses, European Union leaders say Beijing expects open access to Western economies. At the G20 summit, the president of the European Commission warned China not to dump excess steel in the EU at prices that undercut domestic producers, especially when some Chinese factories are subsidized.
The concerns go far beyond steel. This year, China is expected to spend more than $80 billion US in Europe and more than $20 billion in the U.S. acquiring businesses. Both are record amounts.
A few of the deals have been delayed or denied because of concerns over technology transfers or utility ownership. Australia recently blocked the sale of the country's biggest energy grid to Chinese investors, a deal that would have been worth $7.7 billion US.
China has reacted angrily to such interventions, and says criticism of its trade practices is unfair.
Wang Wen, director of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Beijing's Renmin University, says the West should cut China some slack.
"If you look back 20 years ago, look at 10 years ago, you would never imagine that China would be as open as today."
No apologies
Wang says foreign companies are complaining not because they can't get into the Chinese market, but because they now face more competition from domestic firms once they do.
And, echoing Beijing officials, he dismisses Western complaints about the subsidies China offers struggling industries. Without them, he says, the economic situation would be worse.
"They'd say, 'You slow down and you hurt the world's GDP growth.' Whatever China does, we have a lot of international criticism," Wang said.
- Alibaba's new online hub to help Canadian firms access huge Chinese market
- Strange moments from the road during Trudeau's 10-day trip to China
As the meetings wrapped up, there was much talk about reducing trade barriers and increasing co-operation for the sake of the world economy.
But Chinese officials offered nothing concrete to make it easier for foreign firms to thrive in this market.