Part one of this series discussed the roots of modern economic nationalism in anti-imperialism, then went on to consider how US-Chinese economic nationalism has scrambled established ideas about both empire and economics. Part two examined two cases in Africa: the first involved two formerly colonized countries (India and China) competing for dominance of resource extraction in other formerly colonized countries; the second focused on the successful import-substitution (oil refining, cement, fertilizer) companies of Nigeria’s Aliko Dongate and his new, $2.5 billion fertilizer-production deal with Ethiopia. In both posts, the through-line was the defense of national economic sovereignty in a world deeply interconnected through trade.
The third post in the series looks at the blowback created by US-China economic nationalism.
The first case of blowback must surely be the US reaction to Made in China 2025 itself. The original Chinese program was a sovereignty play. China did not want its economic future (green energy, smart manufacturing, biotech, etc.) to be dominated by US companies with massive first-mover and other advantages. Made in China 2025 was a project aimed at economic self-determination. It did not cause much concern at first in the US: President Barack Obama met China’s President Xi Jinping for positive talks in 2016, after the project had been launched, and visited him again in Beijing in 2017 after leaving office. But Trump’s signature economic nationalism, once he settled into the White House in 2017, gradually fastened onto Made in China 2025 as a legitimizing opponent. Much of corporate America and the Democratic Party went along with this, for reasons of their own. The economic nationalism of a still relatively poor country — Chinese GDP per capita in 2015 was less than a third of what it would be in 2025 — begat the economic nationalism of the dominant economy in the world.
The US elaboration of economic nationalism in reaction to, and often in imitation of, Chinese economic nationalism inspired similar reactions elsewhere, most notably in the world’s most populous nation, India. In May 2020, while Trump was still in office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched a Made in India campaign. He made free use of a term, swadeshi, deeply resonant of the anti-imperial movement a century before. It was probably Modi’s move, combined with the breakout of border conflict with China (also May 2020) and the ensuing expulsion of Chinese tech companies from the Indian networks they mostly built, that led China to reframe Made in China 2025 in a longer history of anti-imperialism and attempt to rival India as a leader of the Global South.
The die was cast. An economic nationalism, including import substitution and “food sovereignty,” that had seemingly left the world stage in the early 1970s was back, led by the two dominant economies in the world and its most populous nation.
At the same time, the US, China and India all knew that actual isolation from the global economy was impossible in any imaginable near term. Modi’s atmanirbhar (“self-reliance”) coincided with much closer relations with the US and US companies, for example, including military and tech cooperation, right up to Trump’s sudden and wrenching disenchantment with India in August of this year. US economic nationalism was also not just about autonomy in North America. It involved, for example, throttling Chinese export industries and doing whatever was necessary for “locking in dollar supremacy,” in Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s words, to preserve “extraterritorial power.” Similarly, Chinese self-reliance (zili gongsheng) developed alongside a lengthening list of quite internationalist projects, from the Belt and Road Initiative to promoting the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as a pseudo-NATO. Each of these large economic powers preached economic nationalism but also practiced internationalisms of various kinds and showed no actual desire to stay contentedly within its borders tending its own gardens.
Yet if major-economy economic nationalism in practice had a strong internationalist cast, it was nonetheless nationalistic in terms of the barriers erected against foreign participation in domestic economies. It was also exceedingly transactional, before Trump’s re-election and all the more so after. Friendly meetings at the beginning of September of this year among Modi, Putin, and Xi were often spun — not least by China — as evidence of an emerging international unity when faced with US trade and security policies. But there were no principles involved beyond sovereignty itself, and each of these actors, as well as Trump, has shown himself able to switch sides at will, and to switch back again.
So the sensible conclusion for countries in the rest of the world is to avoid alignment with any of these changeable states and to pursue their own self-sufficiency (“economic sovereignty”) — because you really never do know any more when your foreign supply chains will be reshaped by political policies over which you have no influence.
Economic nationalism fosters more economic nationalism. The unpredictability created by economic nationalism among major players — including the European Union with its quest for “autonomy” and resistance to becoming a US tech “colony” — has come to outweigh the profound efficiency costs. Better to slog through building your own fertilizer or cement industry or AI “stack” than give up what autonomy you have to politicized global markets.
The fourth and final post in this series will consider the future of economic nationalism.