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US-China Relations - 72. page

Global Times: Three “Unexpected Facts” on Each Side of the Trade War

Global Times published a commentary on the day the United States increased the tariff on US$200 billion of Chinese products. The commentary summarized the situation of the trade war thus far, explaining three “unexpected facts” on each side. From the U.S. angle, according to the commentator, the U.S. government did not expect China to be so determined in resisting, did not expect the Chinese economy to be so strong and tough, and did not expect China to be so calm when fighting back. On the Chinese side, the government did not expect the U.S. to destroy its credibility at such a level, did not expect the U.S. to be so unreasonable, and did not expect that the government of a country as large and powerful as the U.S. could put on such a circus. However, China is taking this as a strategic opportunity to move even closer to the center of the world stage. It is not unexpected that there will be challenges and there will be hurdles for China, with strong courage, to overcome, .

Source: Global Times, September 24, 2018
http://world.huanqiu.com/article/2018-09/13099803.html

The Battle for Man’s Soul – Part I

— Part I: Destroying the World Order —

Summary

Many people in the Free World have realized that the engagement policy with red China to induce transformation of its political system has not worked as expected. It is important to analyze the reasons further so that policy makers can design strategies that are more effective and will actually work. Continue reading

One Third of U.S. Companies in China Postponing or Cancelling Investment Plans

Well-known online Chinese news site Sina recently reported on a study report that the American Chamber of Commerce in China just published. The report shows that the tariff war between China and the United States has impacted two thirds of the U.S. companies in China. The next wave affecting US$200 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports will bring the impact scope to above 70 percent. Most of the impacted areas involve cost increases (47.1 percent) and reduced demand (41.8 percent). Around one third of those surveyed U.S. companies plan to postpone or cancel investment plans. Also, around one third of the companies will adjust supply chains. The most popular countries for the new suppliers are Southeast Asian counties and Indian subcontinent countries. The survey was conducted around the beginning of September. Over 430 Chamber member companies responded. Around 61 percent of these companies are in the manufacturing industry.

Source: Sina, September 13, 2018
http://finance.sina.com.cn/roll/2018-09-13/doc-ihkahyhw6731235.shtml

People’s Daily: The Fun of the U.S. Trade War May Die Down Quickly

People’s Daily recently published a commentary in its paper edition, which other media, including Business Daily, then published on-line, predicting the U.S. initiated trade war will soon see its end, although it may look like the U.S. is having a high time and fun at the moment. The “American First” slogan has been shouted for over a year now and some did see a few big steps taken. However, those in the U.S. who did not feel the “First” privileges also started complaining. With the expected big soybean harvest season this fall, Illinois farmers may not necessarily feel happy, since an average loss per acre of soybeans is estimated at US$100. Trump’s US$12 billion federal help may offer a maximum subsidy per acre of US$14. While the U.S. government may not care about the individual farmer’s checkbook, still, the bigger picture does not look rosy either. The U.S. trade deficit in June posted its highest increase in one and one-half years. In the meantime, the U.S. policy makers seem to have suddenly gone completely deaf. They simply ignore the loud and clear voices from the U.S. industries and from around the globe. This is apparently the symptom of a high fever. The dying-down of the fun of “American First” is just a matter of time.

Source: Business Daily, August 16
http://www.nbd.com.cn/articles/2018-08-16/1245887.html

China News: Republicans are Optimistic about Mid-Term Election

China News recently reported that the U.S. Republican Party members would have had many reasons to feel upset or even to panic since the Trump summit with Russian President Putin caused a massive domestic media coverage disaster. However, the Republicans have, in fact, remained calm and even optimistic about the up-coming mid-term election. They expressed the belief that the constant infighting among Democrats is helping. Some members of the Republican National Committee observed that, ever since Hilary Clinton lost the presidential election, the conservatives in the Democratic Party have been under heavy attack from the liberals. This trend has caused many Democrats to move further towards the left. The Republicans thought that the infighting significantly blurred the focus on impeaching the President, weakening ICE, and blocking the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh as Supreme Court Justice.

Source: China News, July 24, 2018
http://www.chinanews.com/gj/2018/07-24/8577456.shtml

As a Result of Tightened Control, Chinese Think Tanks Could Not Give Accurate Assessment of the Trade War

Radio France International carried an article that the South China Morning Post had originally published. The analytical article stated that the reason that the Chinese think tanks gave an incorrect assessment of the trade war was that all these think tanks have to mouth the “party’s voice.” Beijing’s tightened control of ideology on all levels, especially at the college campuses, requires that they must closely follow the party line. Any discussion of government policy without permission could be regarded as “acting wantonly and issuing groundless criticism of the party’s decisions and policies.” It could result in punishment. According to the article, since the top priority of Beijing’s policy is to maintain the party’s power, some policy advisers have avoided in-depth discussions with U.S. think tank researchers and have thus missed the opportunity to understand Washington’s latest thinking and ideas. The article also cited other incorrect approaches that China has taken, including the fact that Beijing hoped to use Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Paulson and Former Secretary of State Kissinger as a “back-door” channel to understand U.S. policy. However, Trump doesn’t even talk to these people. Beijing has seriously underestimated the anti-China sentiment among the upper class in the U.S.

Source: Radio France Internationale, July 27, 2018
http://cn.rfi.fr/%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD/20180727-%E5%8D%97%E6%97%A9%E9%94%99%E8%AF%BB%E7%89%B9%E6%9C%97%E6%99%AE%E6%94%BF%E7%AD%96%E4%B9%83%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E6%99%BA%E5%BA%93%E7%BB%9F%E7%BB%9F%E5%A7%93%E5%85%9A%E7%9A%84%E5%90%8E%E6%9E%9C

Global Times: China Heavily Criticized U.S. Trade War Arguments for Five Days in a Row

Global Times reported on July 20 that Hua Chunying, spokeswoman of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, has heavily criticized the U.S. positions on the trade war against China for the fifth day in a row. Hua called out Peter Navarro, Director of the White House National Trade Council, and suggested his comments on the U.S. “suffering a loss” in trade with China is “reversing black and white.” She said that Navarro’s “nonsense” was just designed to fool those American people who did not want to have the trade war. Hua gave the examples of General Motors and Apple. The Chinese market supplied 58 percent of GM’s annual sales, and China only made 1 percent out of the US$649 average iPhone 7 retail price. Hua asked where the “U.S. loss” was. She concluded that a lot of Americans are “living in their imaginations,” and are attacking other countries “just for domestic political fights.” She expressed the belief that the U.S. is the biggest threat to the world’s stability.

Source: Global Times, July 20, 2018
http://world.huanqiu.com/exclusive/2018-07/12536498.html

Duowei Opinion Article: Reflecting on Beijing’s Misjudgment on Trade War

Duowei News, an overseas Chinese media, published an opinion article on the U.S. China trade war. It reflected on Beijing’s position on the trade war from the beginning and concluded that there are four areas in which Beijing was not prepared. Below is the translation of the article.

On July 20, President Trump told the media that he is ready to impose a tariff on US$500 billion worth of imports from China. On July 19, Peter Navarro, Director of Trade and Industrial Policy said that “China is in a ‘zero-sum game’ with the rest of the world when it comes to trade.” On July 18, Larry Kudlow (Director of the National Economic Council) said that he believes that “Xi (Jinping) is holding the game up.” In short, the trade war is still the focus of China and the U.S.

In reality, contrary to the conclusion the U.S. has drawn that Xi is blocking the trade deal, Beijing has taken a number of measures to cool down the media’s tone on the trade war. It has shifted from calling it the “Sino-U.S. trade war” to the “Sino-U.S. trade tension.” The shift is different from the previous trade tension with Japan, France, the Philippines, and South Korea, which were often accompanied by the increasingly high-profile hostility of China’s official media, and the ruthless “boycott diplomacy” against companies in these countries. This time China has torn up the scripts it relied on in other economic disputes. Instead, it has sought allies in Europe, Asia, and the U.S. themselves. China’s official media reports and comments are relatively restrained. The official Chinese media has been softening the remarks about its controversial industrial policy of Made in China 2025. Beijing has also instructed the media to avoid attacking Donald Trump himself.

On the specific approaches it took to solve the problem, Beijing has repeatedly said that it has appealed to the WTO (World Trade Organization) since July 6, highlighting the solution to trade disputes and minimizing the breakout of the trade war. It has made significant changes in its response strategy because there are several areas that Beijing has misjudged.

First, China was too optimistic about the trade war. After Liu He reached an agreement following his visit to the U.S., Chinese media widely reported on the “achievements” and conducted a special interview with Liu. This in itself suggested that China didn’t recognize the seriousness of the problem between China and the U.S. It was too optimistic. On July 10, after the U.S. announced that it would impose a tariff on $200 billion of imports from China, the Ministry of Commerce responded with shock, even though Trump had already warned on June 15 that, if China was going to retaliate, he would impose tariffs on an additional $200 billion of imports from China. It meant that the U.S. had already issued a warning and this was not a sudden move. How then could the Ministry of Commerce feel shocked? Is this a signal that it lacked preparation or there was an illusion that the U.S. wouldn’t impose a $200 billion tariff on China? China’s counter-attack measures, which were initially formulated, were aimed at Trump’s base (in agriculture states). Some Beijing media even mocked that the U.S. is an agricultural country. After several rounds of negotiations between China and the U.S., China had certain expectations that the trade war might not move forward. It believed that Trump would make a compromise in order to keep his supporters in the agricultural states and China had already met Trump’s request to import more U.S. products. So it was optimistic to think that China would definitely win the battle. In fact, the trade war was not just to reduce the deficit. Trump should know where the problem is between China and the U.S. If the trade war was an election strategy, then he would not easily give it up before his re-election, especially when Trump had already announced his intention to run) for re-election. He could at least use the trade war to win a second term.

Second, the ZTE and Huawei incidents magnified China’s loss and caused nationalist sentimentality among the Chinese public. Beijing didn’t expect the intensity of the impact. The trade war is a tough political move that the U.S. took. It is also true for Beijing. The U.S. slammed Beijing in the key science and technology area, so it has to take tough measures to respond to the feelings of loss of its general public. However while it tried to restore the confidence of its people, it also led the public to the other extreme of blind arrogance thinking that China could easily win the trade war.

Third, Beijing misjudged the influence that the American public, especially the American business community, could exercise on Trump. Liu He had intense meetings with large numbers of U.S. corporations. Beijing has repeatedly called on the U.S. companies to persuade the U.S. government (not to engage in a trade war). However, the reality is that Trump, who was a businessman, does not value input from others in the business community on his foreign policies. In August 2017, Trump made an announcement to end the manufacturing council and the Strategic and Policy Forum which consists of CEOs from large corporations. On the Paris Agreement, Trump was not swayed by the corporate lobbyists. Trump moved ahead on the trade war despite the fact that 24 major U.S. corporations jointly wrote a petition letter asking him not to impose tariffs on Chinese products. Wall Street elites Rex Tillerson and Gary Cohn were kicked out of Trump’s inner circle. Beijing should realize that Trump’s policy itself is unpredictable and others cannot easily influence Trump. The traditional influence on U.S. leaders does not work on Trump.

Fourth, from the very beginning, Beijing misjudged that Peter Navarro and other economic views would have become the mainstream and it did not expect the trade hawk would have gained control in the White House. After Trump won the election, China didn’t expect that the Sino-U.S. relationship would enter into economic confrontation so quickly because the economic views led by Navarro were not popular prior to that. At that time, Beijing was trying to use the 100-day plan to meet the Trump administration’s economic demands on China. Back in 2017, China’s official media repeatedly emphasized that China would not lose the trade war and that the U.S. is bound to be defeated. Beijing was shocked by Trump’s $200 billion tariff. It was shocked because the U.S. is risking its own interests to face a trade war with China. Beijing didn’t expect the trade hawk to become the mainstream voice in Trump’s China trade policy. As a political outsider, after Trump was elected, he took completely different approaches (from his predecessors). The trade hawks didn’t and will not lose their influence in a short time. Trump has not only changed the political environment in the U.S. but also reshaped the international stage. It is not appropriate to look at Trump with traditional eyes and techniques anymore. Beijing’s revised strategy in dealing with the trade war is, itself, a way to determine how to deal with Trump.

Source: Duowei News, July 20, 2018
http://news.dwnews.com/global/news/2018-07-20/60072258.html