[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 61 (Thursday, April 26, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H2197-H2198]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MADE IN CHINA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry) is
recognized for 25 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Madam Speaker, as I was shopping for some family
items recently, I noted how difficult it is to find items that are made
in America. While American manufacturing is, encouragingly enough, on
the rebound, products ranging from hairbrushes to iPods still carry
that ``Made in China'' label. All the while, many questions about China
and its economic policies, foreign policies, and human rights records
are left largely unexamined.
For the good of our economy, it is essential that we thoroughly
understand China's record and their intentions as a country. Our
nations have a complicated and lopsided economic relationship.
Americans buy great quantities of Chinese-made products. China finances
a great portion of America's
[[Page H2198]]
debt. Currently, nearly one-third of our debt is foreign owned with
China easily being the largest debt holder at nearly $1.2 trillion.
Other estimates peg the figure at closer to $2 trillion. The effect of
such indebtedness is the shift of our wealth assets into the hands of a
foreign nation, losing the market for American-made products to a
country with lax labor and environmental standards, which manipulates
its currency and creates unbalanced and unfair trading conditions.
China's involvement on the world stage is also of significant
concern. While it aggressively pursues its own mercantilistic agenda,
China lends little constructive hand to creating conditions for
international stability. China is seen as an enabler of North Korea,
who is actively pursuing nuclear weapons capabilities; and they
continue on their march toward more aggressive missile testing, as
well, despite the protest of the international community.
Over recent months, as the U.S. and the European Union have
accelerated important efforts to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions, China
has been conspicuously absent from the leadership table in this
discussion. China continues to be a top buyer of Iranian oil--one of
the key leverage points of economic sanctions against Iran. At a
discussion I attended, a Chinese official in so many words said the
U.S. is to blame for Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons capability. And
he went on to say, while China does not desire this outcome, we're
going to do business as usual.
Africa is becoming a lost continent, diplomatically and economically,
in favor of international players who do not have the same regard for
human rights as we do. China's influence in resource-rich Africa is
growing rapidly--with disturbing consequences. Direct Chinese
investment in Africa has grown exponentially over the last 2 years. One
million Chinese nationals now do business in Africa, and Chinese energy
and mineral resource companies are quickly acquiring oil fields and
mines.
In the process, China has forged strategic alliances with war
criminals. According to China's Foreign Ministry spokesman, China
shares a ``deep and profound friendship'' with Sudanese war criminal
Omar al-Bashir. I should note there was a bright spot this week. When
approached by South Sudanese President Salva Kiir for assistance as
Sudan and South Sudan march toward war, China's President Hu Jintao
echoed the United States in calling for peace and negotiation between
the two countries, rather than continuing to back Omar al-Bashir. The
international community will look upon China's new role as a diplomatic
figure in this conflict with great interest.
Beyond this, an honest discussion is necessary about Chinese
industrial virtues. A Chinese official has said that in dealing with
``differences in corporate culture and the degree of openness to the
outside world, Chinese companies always take the domestic business
practices with them.'' Chinese companies always take ``domestic
business practices'' with them. Those practices, according to witnesses
who have given congressional testimony, include fertility monitors on
factory floors, invasively examining female employees for pregnancy and
reporting pregnant women to the Chinese family planning police. China
has practiced the violence of forced abortions. China also has
tragically high suicide rates for workers, who use suicide as their
only means of collective bargaining against dire and oppressive labor
conditions.
As China continues to advance as a world economic power, it has a
choice. It can join the responsible community of nations in respecting
the dignity and rights of all persons while conducting affairs with
other nations in an ethical fashion, or it can stand by current
practices that exploit relationships in order to fuel its own brand of
corporate collectivism, undermining international stability in the
process.
Madam Speaker, it is my belief that it is important to seek
reasonable and good relationships with China, a country with a rich
cultural history, a country which is rapidly ascending onto the world
stage. We must do so ideally and practically for the sake of our own
national security. But we must do so with open eyes, fully
understanding the implications when all of us buy products with that
``made in China'' label.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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