'Hi, I'm a soybean': In trade war, China deploys cartoon
legume to reach U.S. farmers
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[July 20, 2018]
BEIJING (Reuters) - In the tense
trade war with the United States, China's government has turned to an
unlikely weapon: a cartoon bean.
"Hi, everybody. I am a soybean. I may not look like much, but I'm very
important," says the animated character in a video posted on Friday on
the website of China Global Television Network (CGTN), the overseas news
network of state-owned China Central Television.
The short video in English with Chinese subtitles seems designed to
undermine support for the trade dispute from U.S. farmers, key
supporters of President Donald Trump, by highlighting the damage tariffs
could have on American soybean exports.
Its release follows the imposition on July 6 of tariffs on $34 billion
of Chinese imports by the United States. In return, China levied taxes
on the same value of products from the United States, including
soybeans. Trump has also threatened further tariffs on $200 billion in
Chinese goods.
The video also highlights efforts by China's Communist Party to turn to
foreign actors, cartoons and even rap to try to deliver its ideas in
less turgid formats.
Opting for the unusual narrator illustrates how Beijing views soybeans
as a powerful tool in its battle with its top trading partner. Soybeans
were the United States' biggest agricultural export to China, worth $12
billion last year.
The video is partly educational, but is mostly aimed at delivering a
political message.
After outlining the main uses of soybeans from tofu to animal feed to
biscuits, the bean turns its focus to its central role in the trade war.
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Soybeans fill a trailer at a farm in Buda, Illinois, U.S., July 6,
2018. REUTERS/Daniel Acker/File Photo
China can choose to buy beans from other exporters, such as Argentina and
Brazil, if prices become too expensive, the bean says in the video.
But falling prices and lower sales would hurt U.S. soybean farmers, it warns,
pointing out that U.S. prices have fallen by 18 percent from May to early July,
to their lowest this year.
Nine out of the top ten soybean growing states voted for Trump in the 2016
presidential election, the video notes.
"So will voters there turn out to support Trump and the Republicans once they
get hit in the pocketbooks?" asks the bean.
The cartoon does not mention that soymeal prices in China are rising, triggering
fears of food inflation. Soymeal is a crucial animal feed ingredient for pork
producers and the country is the world's biggest pork consumer.
It is not the first time soybeans have had a starring role in Beijing's trade
showdown with Washington. Social media was transfixed by a ship racing to
deliver its cargo of U.S. beans before the tariffs kicked in.
(Reporting by Josephine Mason; Additional reporting by John Ruwitch in SHANGHAI;
Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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