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China Seizes Trade Opportunity

Dec 30, 2017, 5:47 AM
News ID: 22388

EghtesadOnline: M stafa Kishavarzi looks over the 10,000 watches crammed into his tiny store wedged between dozens of similar retailers in the jewelry section of Tehran Bazaar.

Every watch in his store—and most of those sold by his competitors—come from one place, and it’s not Iran. It’s China, reads an article published by American public radio organization PRI’s website. Below is the full text:

Kishavarzi sells everything from knock-off Rolexes to nothing-fancy, off-brand watches. He flies to Shenzhen, China, several times a year to buy the timepieces and makes a tidy profit selling them back in Tehran.

“My watches are perfect for middle- and low-income people,” he said proudly. “Even the batteries are guaranteed for a year.”

 Iran’s Largest Trade Partner

According to Financial Tribune, watches are just a tiny part of an explosion in trade between the two countries: China has become Iran’s largest trading partner.

The Chinese government has also extended huge loans to Iran, most recently a $10 billion line of credit for Chinese companies to build infrastructure projects such as dams, power generation facilities and transportation projects.

This is while, the US administration continues to block American investment and most trade with Iran. Analysts in Iran say the US pressures European businesses to do the same.

“The more the US puts pressure on Iran, the closer Iran will get to China,” said Foad Izadi, an assistant professor in the Department of North American Studies at the University of Tehran.

Izadi said China remained a reliable trading partner even during the height of US sanctions earlier this decade.

After implementing the nuclear accord in 2016, Iran signed numerous memoranda of understandings with companies in Italy, Germany and France. But facing the possibility of new US sanctions, few of them followed through with sales or investments.

The European plane manufacturer Airbus, for example, agreed to sell 100 planes to Iran, but has delivered only three so far.

China, on the other hand, has accelerated its investments, with infrastructure projects and sales of moderately priced cars, cellphones and clothing.

The Chinese “are interested in buying and selling stuff”, said Izadi. “They are not interested in regime change. They are not interested in putting political pressure on governments that have an independent foreign policy.”

 Ambitious Target

In 2016, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani announced plans to increase bilateral trade to $600 billion over the next decade. That’s an ambitious goal, to say the least.

China exported $7.95 billion worth of goods to Iran over the last eight months, a 22% increase over the same period of last year, according to Iranian customs statistics provided by the Tehran Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture.

Iran’s exports to China, excluding oil, were valued at $5.7 billion, a 13.5% increase during the same period.

China sees Iran as an important component of its “One Belt, One Road” initiative, connecting China to Europe via Asia. The project costs an estimated $1.7 trillion per year to build ports, highways, rail lines and other infrastructure in the region.

It is also constructing a 2,000-mile railroad to connect the western Chinese city of Urumqi with the northern Iranian city of Mashhad, cutting through four former Soviet republics.

 Seeking Allies Against US Hegemony

Politically, China seeks allies against what it perceives as US hegemony in the Middle East.

Izadi said China does not want to depend on oil produced in Saudi Arabia, the Persian Gulf States and other US allies.

“As long as there is a defiant Iran in the Middle East, the United States cannot fully concentrate on East Asia where China’s core interests are located,” Izadi and Esfandiar Khodaie wrote in a scholarly journal.

But those common interests go only so far.

While China continued to buy Iranian oil during the sanctions era, it kept the money from those sales in special accounts in China as prescribed by UN sanctions.

After sanctions were lifted, however, China did not release the $22 billion it accumulated. It only allows the funds to be used to finance Chinese infrastructure projects in Iran.

“They were ruthless,” political analyst Saeed Laylaz said. “They tried to cheat us. But at least they sold things to us.”

 Shoddy Quality

China faces another problem with Iran. Many ordinary people complain about the shoddy quality of Chinese goods such as the watches in TTehran Bazaar.

“We know there are different quality goods in China,” said shopper Fereshteh, who declined to give her last name. “But the poor quality ones end up coming to Iran. They don’t last for long and break down quickly compared to products from other places.”

Izadi notes that the shoddy quality of some imports is as much the fault of Iranian traders as Chinese manufacturers. The traders buy cheap goods to make a bigger profit.

Even those consumers who want to “buy Iranian” face difficult choices.

Nasibeh Tavakkoli, another shopper, said she supports buying her own country’s products rather than Chinese goods. But like consumers the world over, that’s not so easy anymore.

Asked if she actually buys Iranian, she replied sheepishly, “Sometimes I don’t know if it’s Iranian or Chinese. I end up buying very few Iranian goods.”