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China Begins to Question Whether It’s Ready for a Trade War

96 点作者 propman将近 7 年前

9 条评论

wonderwonder将近 7 年前
An aspect of this is that with the effects of globalization and the reliance of business in both nations on those in the other we could see entire large companies vanish almost over night as their supply chains dry up.<p>If you cant build your product because a component you relied upon is now 25% more expensive, you&#x27;re continued existence is predicated on having deep reserves. Many smaller companies don&#x27;t and even the larger ones will have to implement deep layoffs relatively quickly to conserve resources as they won&#x27;t know how long the trade war will last.<p>This in turn will have an effect on the political situations in both countries although primarily America as its the democracy. Globalization and the economic relationships amongst nations now has a direct effect on the internal politics of those same states.
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duxup将近 7 年前
Like a lot of these article&#x27;s about China... there&#x27;s very little here to know what their actual leadership thinks or doesn&#x27;t think.
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itchyjunk将近 7 年前
Doesn&#x27;t USA have some 10 trillion loan from China? How does that factor into all this? Or is that a parallel issue not directly related to this?
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balls187将近 7 年前
What will this mean for all the Chinese purchased real-estate in America?
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rdlecler1将近 7 年前
I think the next step Trump takes is to offer to drop tariffs against Europe and Canada if they put tariffs on China.
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nilsocket将近 7 年前
Off-topic<p>Doesn&#x27;t Bloomberg identify that their users can click on play, when it&#x27;s needed.<p>It&#x27;s annoying and it&#x27;s wasting my data.
mc32将近 7 年前
The US has played nicer than most countries were they to enjoy its economic might and pre-eminence[1]. Few countries would allow their workforce to endure economic self-inflicted hardship while maintaining an economic advantage in negotiating trade. But the US has, over the years, put up with unfair trade from Japan, SKorea, China, Some of Europe in the name of &quot;free trade&quot;. I don&#x27;t begrudge allowing some disadvantage with regard some developing nations --but not developed nations. For fair trade to work, it has to be bi-lateral. If you unilaterally do fair trade but your partner doesn&#x27;t, you may do your principle good, but you&#x27;re selling out your worker for principle.<p>Since Reagan, maybe before, the blue collar worker of America has seen their government give in and cower in the face of unfair trade saying, &quot;we&#x27;ll make it up in services&quot; or &quot;your goods will be cheaper&quot;. But what good does cheap do you when you have no job and no money? They never saw their lot get better. People wonder why people are now &quot;working poor&quot;.<p>When I was in middle and HS, my bus drivers and janitors (they were not &quot;cleaning engineers&quot; just yet), were able to raise a family with decency. No way that happens now.<p>As Michael Moore poignantly, albeit ironically, said, finally, someone stood up to the corporations and said, &quot;no more&quot;. I&#x27;ll stop the hemorrhaging. One AFL-CIO in PA, the other day, endorsed a Repub. As an atheist, I have to say, Good God, what happened to the Dems? They sold out the American worker in favor of the multinational, transnational capitalists. If they don&#x27;t watch out, they will lose labor to Repubs.<p>[1]Just look at how China manages its advantage in Africa, LatAM, etc. Japan in SEAsia, Russia with Former SU repubs., etc.
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temp-dude-87844将近 7 年前
It&#x27;s interesting to hear Chinese academics take a pragmatic, realist view of potential impacts. A prolonged trade spat with a US strongman is hardly a desirable outcome. But even if China&#x27;s export-oriented industries will suffer due to trade protection measures brewing in the US, EU, and Canada, Trump&#x27;s domestic focus will likely allow many of China&#x27;s global ambitions to continue unabated: in Africa, in Central Asia, and possibly in Oceania.<p>This approach mirrors what the US and Soviet Union pursued during the cold war by winning favors through a mix of economic assistance and direct foreign investment. It&#x27;s a parallel game whose fruits will pay off in the long term, when China reaches its post-industrial stage, and has to use its network of connections to ensure continued prosperity for its people.
3327将近 7 年前
I am no Trump supporter I will start with that. I disagree with almost the all of his policies&#x2F;actions.<p>However, China has been playing behind the US back for too long. Tech espionage, hacking, trade to a certain extent as well. China is not a developing economy as most think. It is already a superpower.<p>This is actually pre-emptive war. No weapons, but at some point the US had to act while the odds were still in its favor.<p>IF you played Civilization, any strategy game - then you know what I am talking about (or history books).<p>&gt;&gt; Loans - But China has tons us US debt!?!?<p>-Yes they do - do you know the best part about an IOU? you guessed it I - O - U. its paper debt. So better not upset me.<p>-Both nations are interlocked in a dance. US spends China Makes. But China also has stolen tons of tech. Nuclear weapons, ballistic missiles. Hacking.<p>-Talk to anyone in the armed forces. The sentiment is bad. There is more going on in the background than we all know.<p>-Talk to anyone over beers in the armed forces. They will say its long over do.<p>What do I think? who cares what I think.<p>cheers.
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