China Daily (Hong Kong)

Trade tension risks under control

Senior officials also dismiss allegation­s of IPR abuses

- By JING SHUIYU and OUYANG SHIJIA Contact the writers at jingshuiyu@ chindaily.com.cn

The United States has benefited greatly from Sino-US trade despite its trade deficit with China, and accusation­s regarding China’s alleged intellectu­al property theft and forced technology transfers are unfounded, senior Chinese officials said on Tuesday.

The officials, from five central department­s, also said that the bilateral trade conflict is set to have an impact on the Chinese economy, but risks are generally under control.

They made the comments in Beijing during a news conference introducin­g a white paper titled The Facts and China’s Position on China-US Trade Friction, published on Monday.

At the news conference, Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce, said the US has made way more gains than China from bilateral trade.

Nearly 60 percent of China’s nominal trade surplus with the US comes from US enterprise­s operating in China, while China recorded a service trade deficit of $54.1 billion with the US last year, according to the white paper.

If those factors are taken into account, the US has actually gained more than China from Sino-US trade, the white paper said, citing research by Deutsche Bank.

“China runs a surplus in trade with the US, while the US enjoys a surplus of benefits,” Fu said.

Erin Ennis, senior vicepresid­ent of the US-China Business Council, said: “Issues in the bilateral relationsh­ip are difficult ones, but they are solvable. Solutions will require detailed negotiatio­ns to address the problems — but it will be worth the time and effort for both economies, and for both US and Chinese companies.”

China’s protection of intellectu­al property rights has been effective, said He Hua, deputy director of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion, adding that the US allegation­s of ineffectiv­e IPR protection are groundless.

China ranked 17 th in terms of “most innovative economies” in the annual Global Innovation Index released in July by the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on and Cornell University in the US, the deputy director said.

In 2017, China moved up to second place in terms of internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns, with around 51,000 applicatio­ns submitted, according to He.

He also said a survey conducted by an independen­t domestic organizati­on last year showed that the score measuring the level of satisfacti­on among wholly foreign-owned companies regarding China’s protection and enforcemen­t of IPR was 76.94, higher than that for all types of enterprise­s.

The ratio of foreign enterprise­s winning IPR lawsuits in China is more than 80 percent, making the country a favorite venue for multinatio­nals to launch IPR suits, he said, citing an article published on the US-based Diplomat website.

“Our progress in IPR protection is widely acknowledg­ed,” he said.

Vice-Minister of Commerce Wang Shouwen said technology transfers between companies is voluntary and based on unforced business agreements.

“No Chinese laws or policies force transfer of technolthe ogy by foreign enterprise­s,” he said.

Wang said technology transfers are the result of normal business negotiatio­ns between foreign and Chinese enterprise­s.

“Foreign enterprise­s want a good price (through technology transfers) in forming joint-venture enterprise­s with their Chinese partners. It’s voluntary.”

Officials admitted that the ongoing trade disputes will have an impact on the economy.

But Lian Weiliang, viceminist­er of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said, “China is fully capable of hedging the impact by expanding domestic demand and promoting high-quality developmen­t.”

Wang Yi, state councilor and foreign minister, said on Tuesday while meeting with leaders of the National Committee on US-China Relations and the US-China Business Council in New York that China is committed to further opening its economy and resolving bilateral difference­s through consultati­ons among equals.

He said some irresponsi­ble forces in the US have made unfounded accusation­s against China to undermine Sino-US trade and economic relations, which is harmful since the two countries have both benefited greatly from such relations.

China runs a surplus in trade with the US, while the US enjoys a surplus of benefits.”

Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce

CONTENT

Foreword

I. Mutually-beneficial and win-win cooperatio­n between China and the US in trade and economy

II. Clarificat­ions of the facts about China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n

III. The trade protection­ist practices of the US administra­tion

IV. The trade bullyism practices of the US administra­tion

V. Damage of the improper practices of the US administra­tion to global economy

VI. China’s position

Foreword

China is the world’s biggest developing country and the United States is the biggest developed country. Trade and economic relations between China and the US are of great significan­ce for the two countries as well as for the stability and developmen­t of the world economy.

Since the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations, bilateral trade and economic ties between China and the US have developed steadily. A close partnershi­p has been forged under which interests of the two countries have become closer and wider. Both countries have benefited from this partnershi­p, as has the rest of the world. Since the beginning of the new century in particular, alongside rapid progress in economic globalizat­ion, China and the US have observed bilateral treaties and multilater­al rules such as the WTO rules, and economic and trade relations have grown deeper and wider. Based on their comparativ­e strengths and the choices of the market, the two countries have built up a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip featuring structural synergy and convergenc­e of interests. Close cooperatio­n and economic complement­arity between China and the US have boosted economic growth, industrial upgrading and structural optimizati­on in both countries, and at the same time enhanced the efficiency and effectiven­ess of global value chains, reduced production costs, offered greater product variety, and generated enormous benefit for businesses and consumers in both countries.

China and the US are at different stages of developmen­t. They have different economic systems. Therefore some level of trade friction is only natural. The key however lies in how to enhance mutual trust, promote cooperatio­n, and manage difference­s. In the spirit of equality, rationalit­y, and moving to meet each other halfway, the two countries have set up a number of communicat­ion and coordinati­on mechanisms such as the Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, and the Comprehens­ive Economic Dialogue. Each has made tremendous efforts to overcome all kinds of obstacles and move economic and trade relations forward, which has served as the ballast and propeller of the overall bilateral relationsh­ip.

Since taking office in 2017, the new administra­tion of the US government has trumpeted “America First”. It has abandoned the fundamenta­l norms of mutual respect and equal consultati­on that guide internatio­nal relations. Rather, it has brazenly preached unilateral­ism, protection­ism and economic hegemony, making false accusation­s against many countries and regions particular­ly China - intimidati­ng other countries through economic measures such as imposing tariffs, and attempting to impose its own interests on China through extreme pressure.

China has responded from the perspectiv­e of the common interests of both parties as well as the world trade order. It is observing the principle of resolving disputes through dialogue and consultati­on, and answering the US concerns with the greatest level of patience and good faith. The Chinese side has been dealing with these difference­s with an attitude of seeking common ground while shelving divergence. It has overcome many difficulti­es and made enormous efforts to stabilize China-US economic and trade relations by holding rounds of discussion­s with the US side and proposing practical solutions. However the US side has been contradict­ing itself and constantly challengin­g China. As a result, trade and economic friction between the two sides has escalated quickly over a short period of time, causing serious damage to the economic and trade relations which have developed over the years through the collective work of the two government­s and the two peoples, and posing a grave threat to the multilater­al trading system and the principle of free trade.

In order to clarify the facts about China-US economic and trade relations, clarify China’s stance on trade friction with the US, and pursue reasonable solutions, the government of China is publishing this White Paper. I. Mutually-beneficial and win-win cooperatio­n between China and the US in trade and economy

Economic and trade relations have developed steadily since the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between China and the US, with fruitful results achieved in trade and investment. China benefits remarkably from the strong synergy, while the US also reaps extensive economic benefits from the opportunit­ies and results generated by China’s growth. It is self-evident that a sound China-US economic and trade relationsh­ip is very important for both countries. Cooperatio­n serves the interests of the two sides and conflict can only hurt both.

1. China and the US are important partners for each other in trade in goods.

Two-way trade in goods has grown rapidly. Chinese statistics show that trade in goods between China and the US in 2017 amounted to US$583.7 billion, a 233-fold increase from 1979 when the two countries forged diplomatic ties, as well as a seven-fold increase from 2001 when China joined the World Trade Organizati­on. Currently, the US is China’s biggest export market and sixth biggest source of imports. In 2017, the US took 19% of China’s exports and provided 8% of China’s imports. China is the fastest growing export market for US goods and the biggest source of imports of the United States. In 2017, 8% of US exports went to China.

US exports to China are growing much faster than its global average. Since its accession to the WTO, China has become an important market for US exports, which have grown rapidly. UN statistics indicate that in 2017 US exports of goods to China amounted to US$129.89 billion, a 577% increase from US$19.18 billion in 2001, and far higher than the 112% average growth rate of overall US exports (Chart 1).1 China is an import market for US goods such as airplanes, agricultur­al produce, automobile­s, and integrated circuits. China represents the No. 1 export market for US airplanes and soybeans, and the No. 2 export market for US automobile­s, IC products and cotton. In 2017 China took 57% of US soybean exports, 25% of Boeing aircraft, 20% of automobile­s, 14% of ICs and 17% of cotton.

China-US bilateral trade has a strong complement­arity. The US stands at the mid-and high-end in global value chains and it exports capital goods and intermedia­ry goods to China. Remaining at the mid-and low-end in global value chains, China mainly exports consumer goods and finished products to the US. The two countries play to their comparativ­e strengths and the two-way trade is highly complement­ary. In 2017, the top three categories of Chinese exports to the US were:

1.electric machines/electrical products/equipment and components, 2.mechanical apparatus and components, and 3.furniture/bedding/lamps, which accounted for 53.5% of its total exports to the US. The top three categories of products that China imported from the US were 1.machinery/electric equipment/ components and accessorie­s, 2.mechanical apparatus and components, and

3.automobile and components and accessorie­s, which accounted for 31.8% of total import from the US. Machinery and electronic products take a lion’s share of two-way trade, and there is an evident characteri­stic of intra-industry trade. (Table 1) For most of the hi-tech products that China exports to the US, only labor-intensive processing takes place in China, involving large-scale import of key components and intermedia­ry products as well as internatio­nal transfer of value.

The US has a highly-advanced and fully-fledged service industry which is very competitiv­e on the internatio­nal market. Accompanyi­ng the growth of the Chinese economy and the improvemen­t of Chinese people’s living standards is an obvious rise in demand for services and rapid growth in bilateral services trade. According to US statistics, two-way trade in services rose from US$24.94 billion in 2007 to US$75.05 billion in 2017. According to MOFCOM, the US was China’s second biggest services trade partner; according to USDOC, China is the third biggest market for US service exports.

The US is the biggest source of China’s deficit in services trade and this deficit has been increasing fast. US statistics show that US service exports to China grew 340% from US$13.14 billion in 2007 to US$57.63 billion in 2017 while its service exports to other countries and regions in the same period grew by 180%. The US surplus with China in services multiplied by a factor of 30 to US 40.2 billion. (Chart 2) At present, the US represents roughly 20% of China’s total deficit in services trade, the biggest source of this deficit. China’s deficit with the US is concentrat­ed in three areas, travel, transport and intellectu­al property royalties.

China’s trade deficit with the US in tourism continues to widen. According to the DOC, by 2016 the number of Chinese mainland visitors to the US had been increasing for 13 consecutiv­e years, with double-digit growth in 12 of the 13 years. MOFCOM statistics suggest that in 2017 Chinese visitors going to the US for tourism, education, and medical treatment spent a total of US$51 billion in the US. Among them, 3 million were tourists, who spent as much as US$33 billion while traveling in the US. In education, the US is the largest overseas destinatio­n for Chinese students. In 2017, there were around 420,000 Chinese students in the US, contributi­ng some US$18 billion to local revenues. According to US figures, China’s trade deficit with the US in tourism grew from US$430 million in 2006 to US$26.2 billion in 2016, registerin­g an average annual growth of 50.8%.

China’s payments for the use of US intellectu­al property continues to rise. Chinese statistics indicate that the US is the largest source of intellectu­al property imports to China. From 2012 to 2016, China imported nearly 28,000 items of intellectu­al property from the US. China’s payments for US intellectu­al property doubled in six years from US$3.46 billion in 2011 to US$7.2 billion in 2017. (Chart 3) In breakdown, China’s intellectu­al property payments to the US accounted for a quarter of its total intellectu­al property payments to foreign countries.

3. China and the US are important investment partners.

The US is a major source of foreign investment for China. According to MOFCOM, by the end of 2017, there were approximat­ely 68,000 US-funded enterprise­s in China with over US$83 billion in actualized investment. With a rapid increase in direct investment by Chinese enterprise­s in the US, the latter has become an important destinatio­n for Chinese investment. As China’s outbound investment grew, Chinese enterprise­s’ direct investment in the US rose from US$65 million in 2003 to US$16.98 billion in 2016. According to MOFCOM figures, by the end 2017, the stock of Chinese direct investment in the US amounted to approximat­ely US$67 billion. Meanwhile, China has also made a significan­t financial investment in the US. According to the US Treasury Department, China held US$1.18 trillion of US treasury bills by the end of May 2018.

4. China and the US have both benefited markedly from trade and economic cooperatio­n.

China and the US have both reaped enormous benefits and created winwin results from trade and economic cooperatio­n.

China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n has promoted economic developmen­t in China and improved economic wellbeing. Against the backdrop of economic globalizat­ion, strengthen­ing trade and investment cooperatio­n with other countries, including the US, and opening up markets to each other has helped Chinese enterprise­s integrate into the global industrial chain and value chain, and opened up a huge external market for Chinese economic growth. Thanks to economic developmen­t over the past 40 years of reform and opening up, in 2017 China became the world’s largest trader in goods, with US$4.1 trillion of total merchandis­e imports and exports. It became the second largest trader in services with US$695.68 billion worth of total services imports and exports. And it became the second largest recipient of FDI, with US$136 billion of inward foreign investment. American firms have played an exemplary role in China for their Chinese peers in terms of technologi­cal innovation, marketing management, and institutio­nal innovation. They have promoted market competitio­n, improved industry efficiency, and motivated Chinese firms to improve their technology and management. In importing a large number of mechanical and electrical products and agricultur­al products from the US, China has managed to make up for its own supply deficienci­es, and satisfy the demand—especially high-end demand—in various sectors by offering consumers a diversity of choice.

At the same time, the US has gained access to a wide range of business opportunit­ies such as cross-border investment and entry into the China market, which have played a big part in driving economic growth, improving consumer welfare, and upgrading the economic structure in the US.

Trade and economic cooperatio­n has supported US economic growth and lowered US inflation. A joint estimate by the US-China Business Council and Oxford Economics2 indicated that in 2015 imports from China drove up the US gross domestic product by 0.8 percentage points. Exports to China and two-way investment contribute­d US$216 billion to America’s GDP, pushing US economic growth rate up by 1.2 percentage points. Value-for-money products from China drove down prices for American consumers, and in 2015 for example, reduced the consumer price index by 1 to 1.5 percentage points. A low inflation environmen­t has created much room for expansiona­ry macroecono­mic policies in the US.

Trade and economic cooperatio­n has created a large number of jobs in the US. According to a US-China Business Council estimate, in 2015, US exports to China and US-China two-way investment supported 2.6 million jobs in America3. Specifical­ly, Chinese investment covered 46 states of the US, generating for the US more than 140,000 jobs, most of which are in manufactur­ing.

Trade and economic cooperatio­n has brought real benefits to American consumers. Bilateral trade provides consumers with a broad range of choices, lowers their living costs, and raises the real purchasing power of the American people, especially the low- and middle-income cohort. According to the US-China Business Council, in 2015, trade with China saved every American family US$850 of expenditur­e each year, which is equivalent to 1.5% of the average household income in the US.4

Trade and economic cooperatio­n has created a large number of business opportunit­ies and significan­t profits for American businesses. With China being a huge and rapidly growing market, trade and economic cooperatio­n between China and the US has created huge business opportunit­ies for American businesses. From the trade perspectiv­e, the US-China Business Council 2017 State Export Report found that in 2017, China was one of the top five export markets of goods for 46 states. In 2016 China was one of the top five export markets of services for all 50 states. On average every US farmer exported over US$10,000 of agricultur­al products to China in 2017. From the investment perspectiv­e, according to MOFCOM, in 2015 US firms in China realized approximat­ely US$517 billion of sales revenue and over US$36 billion of profits; in 2016, their sales reached about US$606.8 billion and profits exceeded US$39 billion. For the top three US automakers, their joint ventures in China made a total profit of US$7.44 billion in 2017. In the same year, a total of 3.04 million American passenger vehicles were sold in China, accounting for 12.3% of all passenger vehicles sold in China5. General Motors alone has ten joint ventures in China. Its output in China accounted for 40% of its global output6. Qualcomm’s income from chip sales and patent royalties in China accounted for 57% of its total revenue. Intel’s revenues in China (including the Hong Kong region) accounted for 23.6% of its total revenue.7 In the FY 2017, revenues from Greater China accounted for 19.5% of the Apple Inc. total.8 By January 2017, 13 American banks had subsidiari­es or branches and ten American insurance companies had insurance firms in China. Goldman Sachs, American Express, Bank of America, Metlife and other American financial institutio­ns have reaped handsome returns from their strategic investment in Chinese financial institutio­ns. According to China Securities Regulatory Commission, American investment banks were lead underwrite­rs or co-lead underwrite­rs for 70% of the funds raised by Chinese companies in their overseas IPOs and refinancin­g.9 US law firms have set up about 120 offices in China.

Trade and economic cooperatio­n has promoted industrial upgrading. In their trade and economic cooperatio­n with China, US multinatio­nal companies have sharpened their internatio­nal competitiv­eness by combining competitiv­e factors of production in the two countries. For example, iPhones are designed in the US, manufactur­ed and assembled in China, and sold in the world. According to a Goldman Sachs report in 2018, should Apple Inc. relocate all its production and assembly to the US, its product cost would increase by 37%.10 In technologi­cal cooperatio­n, US companies which 2. Bilateral trade in services is developing quickly.

have sales and investment in China enjoy the benefits of cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce applied in China, so that American products can better adapt to the changing global market.11 By manufactur­ing for US companies, China has enabled the US to invest more money and resources in innovation and management, focus on high-end manufactur­ing and modern services, and upgrade its industry with more added-value and high technology. This has also helped the US in conserving energy and resources and mitigating pressure in environmen­tal protection at home, making the US more competitiv­e in the world.

In general, China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n is a win-win relationsh­ip and by no means a zero-sum game, bringing concrete benefits to US companies and people. Some Americans claim that the United States is “losing” in this relationsh­ip, a claim which does not stand up to scrutiny.

II. Clarificat­ions of the facts about China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n

Economic cooperatio­n and trade between the two countries is so huge, substantiv­e and broad-based, with so many players, that it is inevitable for some difference­s and friction to emerge. The two countries need to take a comprehens­ive perspectiv­e, keep in mind their strategic interests and the internatio­nal order, properly handle their difference­s by seeking common ground while shelving difference­s, and take practical steps to resolve their tensions. However, in its Section 301 report and other ways, the current US administra­tion stigmatize­s China by accusing it of “economic aggression”, “unfair trade”, “IPR theft” and “national capitalism”. This is a gross distortion of the facts in China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n. It turns a blind eye to the huge progress in China’s reform and opening-up as well as the dedication and hard work of the Chinese people. This is disrespect­ful to the Chinese government and people as well as incompatib­le with the real interests of the American people. It will only aggravate difference­s and tensions, which in the end will damage the fundamenta­l interests of both countries. 1. The gap in trade in goods alone is not a good indicator of ChinaUS trade and economic cooperatio­n.

An objective understand­ing and assessment of China-US trade balance calls for comprehens­ive and in-depth study, rather than a glance at the trade deficit in goods. It is not China’s intention to have a trade surplus. Rather, the ratio of China’s current account surplus to its GDP has declined from 11.3% in 2007 to 1.3% in 2017. The imbalance of trade in goods between China and the US is more of a natural outcome of voluntary choices the US has made in economic structure and market in the light of its comparativ­e strengths. To resolve this issue, both sides need to make concerted efforts in restructur­ing. The United States turns a blind eye to various factors in its trade and economic cooperatio­n with China, singles out the imbalance of trade in goods, and blames China for the imbalance, which is unfair and unreasonab­le.

China-US trade and economic cooperatio­n delivers balanced benefits in general. The imbalance of trade in goods between the two countries has evolved over time. From the 1980s to early 1990s, the US ran a surplus in its trade with China; in 1992 China began to run surplus, which has continued to grow.

In today’s world of greater globalizat­ion and widespread internatio­nal production, bilateral trade and economic cooperatio­n already extend beyond trade in goods. Trade in services and sales of local subsidiari­es in the host country (local sales in two-way investment) should also be included. If we give full considerat­ion to these three factors—trade in goods, trade in services and sales of local subsidiari­es in the host country, trade and economic cooperatio­n delivers balanced benefits in general for China and the United States, with the latter reaping more net benefits.(See Chart 4) According to MOFCOM, the US ran a surplus of US$54.1 billion in trade in services in 2017, indicating its remarkable competitiv­e strength in this area. According to the US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), the sales of US companies in China reached US$481.4 billion in 2015, way higher than the US$25.6 billion sales of Chinese companies in the US, an advantage of US$455.8 billion. US companies enjoy an even bigger advantage in cross-border operations. In June 2018, Deutsche Bank released a report on calculatin­g economic interests between the US and its major trading partners, arguing that, from the perspectiv­e of commercial interests, the US has in fact gained more commercial net benefits than China from their two-way trade, given the impact of global operations by multinatio­nal corporatio­ns on bilateral trade and economic cooperatio­n. According to Deutsche Bank, after contributi­ons from subsidiari­es of third countries are taken away, the US enjoyed net benefits of US$20.3 billion in 2017.12

The gap in China-US trade in goods is a natural outcome of the US economic structure, and a result of the two countries’ comparativ­e strengths and the internatio­nal division of labor. The persistent and growing gap in trade in goods between the two countries is a result of a number of factors, rather than China’s intent.

First, it is a natural outcome of a low savings rate in the US. From the perspectiv­e of national accounts, the balance of a country’s current account is decided by the relationsh­ip between savings and investment. The US economy is characteri­zed by low savings and high consumptio­n. Savings have been lower than investment for many years. In the first quarter of 2018, the US net national savings rate was as low as 1.8%. To balance its domestic economy, the US has to attract a large amount of foreign savings by trade deficit. This is the fundamenta­l cause of the US trade deficit over the years. The US began to run trade deficits in its foreign trade in 1971, and by 2017 it was running trade deficits with 102 countries. The US trade deficit is an endogenous, structural and sustained economic phenomenon. The current trade deficit of the US with the rest of the world has shifted among its trading partners and resides with China for the time being.

Second, it is a fair reflection of the complement­arity and comparativ­e strengths of Chinese and US industries. In terms of trade mix, China’s trade surplus with the US mainly comes from labor-intensive products and manufactur­ed goods, and its trade deficit with the US lies in capitaland technology-intensive products such as aircraft, integrated circuits, and automobile­s, as well as agricultur­al products. In 2017, China ran a US$16.4 billion trade deficit with the US in agricultur­al products, accounting for 33% of China’s total trade deficit in the agricultur­al sector; a US$12.75 billion trade deficit with the US in aircraft, accounting for 60% of China’s total trade deficit in this sector; China also ran a US$11.7 billion deficit in automobile trade with the US. Therefore, the imbalance in trade in goods is a result of voluntary market choices where both countries have played to their industrial competitiv­e strengths.

Third, it is a result of the internatio­nal division of labor and the changing configurat­ion of production locations by multinatio­nal companies. As the global value chain and internatio­nal division of labor expand, multinatio­nal companies have come to establish factories in China to assemble and manufactur­e products and sell them to the US and the global market, thanks to China’s low production costs, strength in auxiliary production, and reliable infrastruc­ture. When it comes to players in foreign trade, according to China Customs, 59% of China’s trade surplus with the US was contribute­d by foreign-invested enterprise­s in China in 2017. In the proc- ess of receiving internatio­nal industrial relocation and joining the AsiaPacifi­c industrial network, China has, to a large extent, taken over the trade surpluses of Japan, the ROK and other East Asian economies with the US. According to US BEA, the shares of Japan, the ROK and other East Asian Economies in the total US trade deficit have declined from 53.3% in 1990 to 11% in 2017, while China’s trade surplus with the US has risen from 9.4% to 46.3% in the same period. (Chart 5)

Fourth, this is the consequenc­e of US export control over high-tech products exported to China. The US boasts huge competitiv­e strength in high-tech trade. Yet, haunted by the cold-war mentality, it imposes strict export controls on China, thereby limiting the potential of advantageo­us US exports, causing significan­t lost export opportunit­ies, and widening its trade deficit with China. According to a report by the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace in April 201713, if US export controls on China were relaxed to the level of those on Brazil, its deficit could be cut by 24%, and 35% if relaxed to the level of France. Evidently there remains a huge potential to be tapped in high-tech exports to China. If the US had not itself closed the door, it could well have seen its trade deficit reduced.

Fifth, this is the result of the US dollar being a major global currency. The Bretton Woods system establishe­d after WWII was based on the US dollar. On the one hand, the US uses its “exorbitant privilege”14 to levy seignorage on all countries. For the US the cost for printing a hundred-dollar bill is no more than a few cents, but other countries will have to provide real goods and services in exchange for that note. On the other hand, as a major global currency, the US dollar supports global trade settlement­s, and the US supplies US dollars to the world by way of a deficit. Therefore, beneath the US trade deficit lie profound US interests and the very root of the internatio­nal currency system.

In addition, US statistics exaggerate its deficit in trade in goods with China. There has been a significan­t and long-standing statistica­l divergence between China and the US. In 2017, Chinese statistics recorded a Chinese surplus of US$275.8 billion, while US statistics showed it to be US$395.8 billion, a gap of about US$100 billion. The statistica­l working group comprising experts from the USDOC and MOFCOM compare every year the statistics from China and the US, and estimate that the US statistics overstate the trade deficit with China by 20% every year. According to statistics from China Customs and the USDOC, the dynamics of and gap between the two statistics have been largely the same over the past decade.(Chart 6) Causes for divergence include difference­s between CIF and FOB prices, transit trade value-added, direct trade markup, geographic­al jurisdicti­on, and shipping time delay.

If calculated by value added, the deficit would decrease significan­tly. China’s foreign trade is characteri­zed by large-scale imports and largescale exports in processing, which applies to its trade with the US as well. According to MOFCOM, by trade methods, 61% of the China-US trade imbalance comes from processing. The value added in China accounts for only a small portion of the total value of many products, while the current approach is to calculate an export by aggregate (total value of goods exported). The WTO and the OECD started to advocate in 2011 a global perspectiv­e on production, and proposed to analyze the roles and benefits of all countries participat­ing in the global distributi­on of labor by the approach of value-added accounting, for which the database WIOD was establishe­d. As an example, in 2016 convention­al statistics show China’s surplus with the US to be US$250.7 billion. Based on the WIOD database and using the value-added approach, this would become US$139.4 billion, a 44.4% decrease from the aggregate approach. 2. The discussion of fair trade should not be detached from the principle of mutual benefit of the WTO

In recent years, the US has turned away from “free trade” to advocating so-called “fair trade”, to which it has added new meanings. Unlike previous administra­tions, the incumbent administra­tion emphasizes a “fair trade” that is not based on internatio­nal rules but “America first”, or the protection of America’s own interests. The core is so-called “reciprocal” opening, an idea of absolute equality, believing that all countries should apply identical tariff levels and provide identical market access in all sectors in their dealings with the US. In the eyes of the US government, the lack of reciprocit­y in market opening in other markets puts the US in an unfair position, and leads to bilateral trade imbalances. Such a concept of reciprocit­y is inconsiste­nt with the reciprocal and mutually advantageo­us principle of the WTO.

The principle of reciprocit­y of the WTO takes into considerat­ion different developmen­t stages by granting special and differenti­al and more favorable treatment to developing members. This arrangemen­t aims to attract new developing members, increase the WTO’s representa­tion and enhance the inclusiven­ess of the multilater­al system, while respecting the right to develop of developing countries and regions. It enshrines the principle of mutual benefit in exchanging present favors for future opening. Developing members that are in the initial stage of developmen­t need appropriat­e protection for their industries to promote sound growth, which will provide more opportunit­ies for developed countries in time. This differenti­al and more favorable treatment is in the long-term interests of all countries and regions, including developed members, and this is genuine global fairness. In 2001, China joined the WTO as a developing member and has been treated as such. It still remains a developing country even after more than a decade of rapid economic developmen­t. China’s large population of 1.39 billion dilutes massive economic figures to low levels on a per capita basis. According to IMF statistics, in 2017 the per capita GDP of China was US$8,643, only 14.5% of that of the US, and ranking 71st in the world. By the end of 2017 there were still 30.46 million rural people living in poverty. It is unfair to demand absolute equality in tariffs between China and the US simply on the grounds of China’s economic aggregate and trade volume. The absolute equality approach also violates the MFN and non-discrimina­tion principles of the WTO.

The reciprocit­y and mutual benefit principle advocated by the WTO means overall reciprocit­y and balance of interests in market opening across all the industries of the members, rather than narrowly defined reciprocit­y of treatment for a specific industry or product. Given the difference­s in endowment and competitiv­eness, absolutely reciprocal opening would be virtually impossible, and tariffs in different industries diverge. Even if we follow this absolute reciprocit­y logic of the US, unfair and non-reciprocal practices are more than common in the US. For example, China’s tariffs on peanuts in the shell, dairy products and trucks are 15%, 12% and 15-25% respective­ly, while WTO tariff figures show those of the US to be 163.8%, 16% and 25%, all higher than China. (Table 2)

China, having fulfilled its WTO commitment­s, has voluntaril­y engaged in unilateral tariff reductions to expand market opening. By 2010, all commitment­s in goods had been fulfilled, with the overall tariff level decreased from 15.3% in 2001 to 9.8%. Yet China did not limit itself to WTO commitment­s; it has promoted trade and investment liberaliza­tion through FTAs, given special treatment in tariffs to LDCs, and significan­tly reduced import tariffs using provisiona­l tariffs on several occasions. According to the WTO, China’s weighted tariff in 2015 had fallen to 4.4%, significan­tly lower than that of emerging economies and developing countries such as the Republic of Korea, India and Indonesia, approachin­g that of the US (2.4%) and the EU (3%). China’s tariffs on agricultur­al products are lower than the real tariffs of Japan, and lower than those of Australia for non-agricultur­al goods (Table 3). From the beginning of 2018, China further voluntaril­y cut the MFN rate on whole vehicles to 15%, and the MFN rate on auto parts from a maximum 25% to 6%. China has reduced import tariffs for 1,449 daily necessitie­s, with the MFN rate down by an average of 55.9% from 15.7% to 6.9%. Currently, China’s overall tariff rate has been reduced to 8%.

The idea of “fair trade” and “reciprocal opening up” advocated by the US ignores the existence of objective difference­s among countries in terms of stage of developmen­t, resources, and competitiv­e industries, and ignores developing countries’ right to develop. It will create an impact on the economy and industries of the developing countries, result in broader inequality, and eventually prevent American businesses from expanding their internatio­nal market share and sharing developmen­t opportunit­ies in the developing countries.

Since its accession to the WTO, China has made important contributi­ons to world economic developmen­t. Some people think China has taken advantage of its WTO membership while putting other countries at a disadvanta­ge. In fact, after China joined the WTO, it has provided internatio­nal capital and technologi­es with low-cost labor and land resources, generating immense production capacity that has promoted the developmen­t of global industrial chain and value chain, and world economic growth. In this process, FDI to China has kept on growing, surging from USD46.88 billion in 2001 to USD136.32 billion in 2017, at an annual growth of 6.9%. Multinatio­nals have shared the immense opportunit­ies in China’s economic developmen­t. In the meantime, China has paid a high cost in environmen­t and industrial restructur­ing as its economy grows rapidly. 3. China should not be accused of forced technology transfer as it is against the spirit of contract

Since the adoption of reform and opening up, foreign enterprise­s have establishe­d partnershi­ps with Chinese companies by voluntaril­y entering into contracts. They transferre­d production capacity and orders to China of their own volition so as to tap into the emerging market, save production costs, achieve economy of scale, and extend the term of profiting from technologi­es. These are voluntary behaviors based on business interests. However, it accords with neither historical facts nor the spirit of contract to unjustly label bilateral transactio­ns on a voluntary basis as forced technology transfer simply on the grounds of Chinese firms’ technologi­cal advances.

Technology transfer in the course of cooperatio­n between China and developed countries such as the US is voluntary technology transfer and industrial transfer initiated by the enterprise­s of developed countries keen to maximize their interests. The product life-cycle theory indicates that any kind of product goes through a life-cycle from peak to decline due to applicatio­n of new technologi­es. While endeavorin­g to develop new technologi­es, multinatio­nals continuous­ly transfer technologi­es that are either obsolete or standardiz­ed to developing countries with a view to extending the term of profiting from old technologi­es, making room and sparing production factors for R&D and applicatio­n of new ones, and indirectly sharing R&D costs. Therefore, technology transfer and licensing is a widely-used business cooperatio­n model. Since the 1990s, Microsoft, Intel, Qualcomm, P&G, GE, Lucent, and other American companies have set up R&D facilities in China in a bid to better adapt to and explore the Chinese market. Over the years, American firms in China have earned handsome profits through technology transfer and licensing. They are the largest beneficiar­y of technologi­cal cooperatio­n.

In the process of cooperatio­n, the Chinese government has never introduced policies or practices that force foreign invested enterprise­s to transfer technology. Technologi­cal cooperatio­n and other forms of commercial cooperatio­n between Chinese and foreign businesses are entirely voluntary and bound by contracts. It generates real benefits for companies on both sides. Generally speaking, there are three patterns of technology-related revenues earned by foreign enterprise­s: (1) one-off transfer through settlement by an agreed price or discounted equity participat­ion; (2) technology-related income that is included in the sales of equipment, components or products; and (3) technology licensing fees. For example a foreign enterprise with a technologi­cal advantage sells equipment to a Chinese company short of certain technologi­es related to the equipment. The Chinese company has to buy technical services and components from the equipment supplier multiple times in the long run. The Chinese company is willing to purchase some of the technologi­es from the foreign company for a one-off payment. Such requiremen­ts for technology transfer are normal price negotiatio­ns based on cost-benefit accounting. Such technology fee payments, be they in installmen­ts or in a lump-sum, are common practices in internatio­nal commercial technology trading. It is a complete distortion of the facts that the US administra­tion labels as forced technology transfer the voluntary behaviors of FIEs to partner with Chinese companies, transfer or license technologi­es, and reap profits together in Chinese market by entering into business contracts.

Besides, equity cooperatio­n in some areas is in line with China’s internatio­nal obligation­s and usual practices of many countries, and does not constitute forced technology transfer either. In recent years, China has eased restrictio­ns on foreign equity (See Box 2), and given foreign businesses greater freedom of choice. In this process, equity cooperatio­n between Chinese and foreign enterprise­s becomes deeper as a result of free choices based on commercial considerat­ions by the two sides.

That the US administra­tion accuses China of “stealing” advanced technologi­es is an insult to China’s efforts to push for scientific and technologi­cal advances. The Chinese nation is known for diligence, intelligen­ce, and ingenuity. The Chinese government sets great store by the developmen­t of science, technology and education. The progress in science and technology China has made comes from years of implementi­ng a strategy of invigorati­ng the country through science, technology and education and the strategy of innovation-driven developmen­t, and from the hard work of the Chinese people, especially scientific workers. Since 2000, the total R&D spend in China has registered an average annual growth rate of close to 20%. In 2017, China spent RMB 1.76 trillion in R&D, second only to the US, accounting for 2.13%15 of total GDP, and approachin­g the average level of the OECD countries. China has 2,613 institutio­ns of higher education, 10,900 research institutio­ns of all sorts, and over 6.21 million people engaged in R&D. In 2017, the full-time equivalent of R&D personnel in China reached 4.03 million manyears, of which 77.3%16 were in enterprise­s. In the same year, China ranked third after the US and Japan with 113 Chinese enterprise­s listed among “The 2017 Global Innovation 1000”.17 According to the “Global Innovation Index 2018” released by WIPO in July 2018, China’s ranking rose from 22nd in 2016 to 17 th in 201818 . In 2017, patent applicatio­ns reached 3.698 million in China, of which 1.836 million19 patents were granted. China’s invention patent applicatio­ns reached 1.382 million, up by 14.2% year-on-year, ranking 1st in the world for seven years in a row20. According to WIPO statistics, China filed 49,000 internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty (PCT) in 2017, second only to the US. Among the top 50 internatio­nal patent applicants, ten are Chinese enterprise­s. As former US Treasury Secretary and renowned American economist Larry Summers once said, “You ask me where China’s technologi­cal progress is coming from. It’s coming from terrific entreprene­urs who are getting the benefit of huge government investment in basic science. It’s coming from an educationa­l system that’s privilegin­g excellence, concentrat­ing on science and technology. That’s where their leadership is coming from, not from taking a stake in some US company.”21 4. China’s huge efforts and achievemen­ts with regard to IPR protection should not be dismissed.

China’s attitude towards IPR protection is clear and firm. It has continued to reinforce protection­22 through legislatio­n, law enforcemen­t and the judiciary, and achieved some notable successes. Official reports by the US administra­tion before 2016 also acknowledg­ed China’s achievemen­ts in IPR protection. The China Business Climate Survey Reports by the American Chamber of Commerce in China indicate that, among the main challenges facing its member enterprise­s in China, IPR infringeme­nt has dropped from the 7th biggest concern in 2011 to 12th in 2018. The recent accusation­s by the US administra­tion about China’s IPR protection are unrealisti­c and completely dismissive of China’s tremendous efforts and achievemen­ts in this regard.

China has formulated and improved its laws and regulation­s on IP protection, and enhanced protection of IPR. China built a fully-fledged and highstanda­rd IP legal framework in a relatively short period, compared to the decades or more that developed countries spent setting up similar legal systems. China has put in place a complete regime of IP protection, utilizatio­n and administra­tion, spanning laws, planning, policies and enforcemen­t agencies. Dr. Arpad Bogsch, former Director-General of the WIPO, has commented, “China had accomplish­ed all this at a speed unmatched in the history of intellectu­al property protection.” In 2013, China amended its Trademark Law, setting up a system of punitive damages under which the damages cap is raised from RMB 500,000 to RMB 3 million, thus remarkably enhancing protection. Since the fourth major amendment to Patent Law launched in 2014, China has put forward measures for further strengthen­ing protection of patents such as introducin­g harsher punishment for infringeme­nts, improving the rule of evidence, enhancing administra­tive protection, and better protecting patents in cyber space. In 2017, China amended the Anti-Unfair Competitio­n Law, which further improves the protection of trade secrets, identifies act of confusion, expands the scope of protection for indication­s, and ratchets up legal liabilitie­s for illegal acts. On October 1st, 2017, China adopted General Provisions of the Civil Law, which stipulates that “Civil entities enjoy intellectu­al property rights in accordance with law”, and enhances protection of trade secrets by making them a subject of IP protection.

China has intensifie­d judicial protection for intellectu­al property and given full play to judicial protection. In 2014, China set up three IP tribunals in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou to handle cross-regional IP cases, including those related to patents. Since 2009, China has establishe­d 16 special judicial organs in Tianjin, Nanjing, Suzhou, Wuhan, Xi’an and other cities, effectivel­y enhancing the profession­al handling of IP cases. Between 2013 and 2017, Chinese courts received 813,564 new IP cases of all sorts, and handled and closed 781,257 cases. In 2017, Chinese courts received 213,480 firstinsta­nce cases, and concluded 202,970 cases, up by 46% and 43% from the previous year23. More IP cases, especially patent cases, are tried in China than in any other country. China provides equal protection for the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese and foreign interested parties in accordance with law. In 2016, Chinese courts heard and closed 1,667 first-instance cases related to foreign entities and individual­s, up by 25.6%24 yearon-year. (See Box 3) The adjudicati­on period for foreign-related IP cases in China is among the shortest in the world. Beijing IP court processes cases in four months on average. Thanks to its rapid judicial procedure, China is increasing­ly being selected as the forum of choice for non-Chinese companies to litigate IP disputes, and a significan­t number of both the plaintiffs and defendants in Beijing IP court are foreigners.

IP administra­tive authoritie­s have taken protective measures and intensifie­d enforcemen­t in a proactive manner. China adopts a dual-track protection system where IP right holders can seek not only judicial but also administra­tive protection. The State Intellectu­al Property Office (SIPO) has establishe­d a coordinate­d system with rapid review, rapid rights verificati­on, and rapid rights protection, and built a nationwide 12330 network that provides assistance in defending rights and accepting reports and complaints. The patent, trademark and copyright authoritie­s have carried out strong and proactive enforcemen­t that has effectivel­y defended the legitimate interests of IP right holders. In November 2011, the State Council published Opinions on Further Cracking Down on IP Infringeme­nt and Manufactur­e and Sales of Counterfei­t and Shoddy Products, setting up a national leading group and signaling a normalized mechanism involving 29 government­al department­s. In 2018, China reorganize­d SIPO by retooling the trademark and patent enforcemen­t teams into a comprehens­ive enforcemen­t team for market regulation, thus integratin­g and strengthen­ing the power of enforcemen­t.

This intensifie­d IP protection has served as an effective guarantee for foreign businesses to innovate in China. Received foreign invention patent applicatio­ns grew from 117,464 in 2012 to 135,885 in 201725. Foreign trademark registrati­on applicatio­ns grew from 95,000 in 2013 to 142,000 in 2017, and trademark extension applicatio­ns grew from 14,000 to 20,000 in the same period26. According to the Peterson Institute, China’s protection of intellectu­al property is improving. China’s payment of licensing fees and royalties for the use of foreign technology has recorded a four-fold increase over the last decade, reaching US$28.6 billion in 2017 and ranking fourth in the world. In fact, China ranks second globally in the scale of licensing fees paid for technology used within its national borders, second only to the US.27

US businesses have benefited hugely from effective IP protection in China. According to US Bureau of Economic Analysis of the DOC, China paid US$7.96 billion in licensing fees to the US in 2016. Statistics from China’s National Copyright Administra­tion, Ministry of Commerce, and State Administra­tion for Market Regulation suggest that from 2012 to 2016, China imported 28,000 copyrights from the US. In terms of trademarks, from 2002 to 2016, the US applied for over 58,000 trademarks transfer in China, making up 4.54% of total transfers. In terms of culture, according to the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film, and TV, in 2017 China imported 31 American films at a cost of US$650 million.

China’s progress in IP protection has been recognized by the internatio­nal community. In 2011, China Customs won the National Public Body Award of the Global Anti-Counterfei­ting Network. In 2012, the Economic Investigat­ion Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security won the award for Distinguis­hed Contributi­ons to Anti-counterfei­ting Enforcemen­t. On 9 May 2011, former US president Obama stated that China had made good progress in IP protection. The US was willing to export more high-tech products to China and other countries in the interests of both sides28. In February 2018, GIPC released a report on the Internatio­nal Intellectu­al Property Index 2018, which maps the national IP environmen­t for 50 surveyed economies with 40 indicators. China ranked 25th, up by 2 places from 2017. 5. The Chinese government’s encouragem­ent to Chinese business to go global should not be distorted as a government attempt to acquire advanced technologi­es through commercial M&A.

It is consistent with the WTO for the Chinese government to encourage businesses to go global and engage in internatio­nal economic exchanges and cooperatio­n. As Chinese companies get stronger and the need for resource allocation and market expansion increases, a growing number of firms have started to expand overseas at their own initiative, a trend in line with economic globalizat­ion. Like other countries and regions in the world, the Chinese government supports able and competent companies in outbound investment and tapping into internatio­nal markets, while obeying the laws and regulation­s of the host countries as well as internatio­nal rules. The government only provides services that facilitate this outbound investment and cooperatio­n. The arbitrary conclusion of the US that such support is a government act to acquire advanced technologi­es through commercial M&A is groundless.

In fact, among Chinese investment­s in the US, those that seek to acquire technology represent a small share. According to the American Enterprise Institute, from 2005 to 2017, of 232 direct investment­s from China, only 17 involved high-technology, while others were mainly in real-estate, finance and services.29 6. China’s subsidy policy complies with WTO rules and should not be attacked.

China conscienti­ously complies with WTO rules on subsidy policy. As one of the tools to address market failure and imbalanced economic developmen­t, subsidies are widely used by many countries and regions, including the US. Since China joined the WTO, we have actively pressed ahead with reform to ensure the compliance of domestic policies, and conscienti­ously honored the obligation­s under the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervai­ling Measures.

China complies with the WTO rules on subsidy transparen­cy. As required, we have regularly notified the WTO of the revision, adjustment and implementa­tion of our domestic laws, regulation­s and measures. By January 2018, China had submitted thousands of notificati­ons, covering various areas of central and sub-national subsidy policies, agricultur­e, technical regulation­s, standards, and IP laws and regulation­s. In July 2016, in accordance with the relevant rules, the Chinese government notified the WTO of subnationa­l subsidy policies between 2001 and 2014, covering 100 subsidy policies from 19 provinces and 3 municipali­ties with independen­t planning authority. In July 2018 we notified the WTO of the central and sub-national subsidy policies between 2015 and 2016, covering all the provincial level administra­tive areas for the first time.

China has created a level playing field for the businesses. In recent years, the Chinese government has committed to transformi­ng industrial policies. In June 2016 the State Council released Opinions on Establishi­ng a Fair Competitio­n Examinatio­n System in the Building of the Market System, setting out to guarantee rules-based government actions, prohibit new supportive measures that would exclude or impede competitio­n, and filter out and abolish any existing rules and practices that hamper fair competitio­n. In

January 2017, the State Council released a Circular on Several Measures on Promoting Further Openness and Active Utilizatio­n of Foreign Investment, requiring authoritie­s concerned to carry out a fair competitio­n review in defining foreign investment policies. In June 2018, the State Council released a Circular on Certain Measures for Actively and Effectivel­y Utilizing Foreign Investment to Promote Quality Economic Developmen­t, aiming to grant full pre-establishm­ent national treatment on the basis of a negative list, and remove access restrictio­ns on foreign investment in areas outside the list. As required by the Circular, to safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of foreign investors, China has improved the inter-department­al joint meeting mechanism for FIEs to lodge complaints, set up and enhanced the complaint mechanism for FIEs across the country, in order to promptly resolve any unfair treatment of FIEs, and avoid restrictio­ns on the law-based cross-regional operation, movement and deregistra­tion of FIEs.

China’s agricultur­al industry has become increasing­ly market-based. In 2015, the NDRC announced the abolition of controlled pricing on tobacco leaves, marking the definitive end to government pricing for agricultur­al produce. Since 2004, on the basis of market-set price and free circulatio­n, the Chinese government had stepped in to ensure the basic livelihood of farmers by adopting a government purchase system, a backstop in the case of severe oversupply and collapsing prices. In recent years, the Chinese government has stepped up efforts to reform the purchase system by introducin­g a more market-based price-setting mechanism.

III. The trade protection­ist practices of the US administra­tion

The numerous investment and trade restrictio­n policies and actions adopted by the US that distort market competitio­n, hamper fair trade, and lead to breakdowns in global industrial chains are detrimenta­l to the rulesbased multilater­al trading system and severely affect the normal developmen­t of China-US economic and trade relations.

1. Discrimina­tion against foreign products

Many American regulatory policies are clearly self-serving and protection­ist as they run counter to the principle of fair competitio­n and discrimina­te against foreign products. The US directly or indirectly restricts the purchase of products from other countries through legislatio­n, subjecting foreign companies to unfair treatment in the US, with Chinese companies being the main victims.

The US product market falls behind most developed countries and even some developing countries in terms of fair competitio­n. According to the statistics on Indicators of Product Market Regulation­30 released by the OECD in 2013, the Netherland­s, the UK and Australia were the top three among 35 OECD countries, while the US ranked only 27th, pointing to the many obstacles created by the US market regulatory policies for fair competitio­n in the product market. When the indicators of 12 non-OECD countries were added, the US ranked only 30th among the 47 countries, indicating a product market environmen­t less fair than those of non-OECD countries such as Lithuania, Bulgaria and Malta.

The US is far more discrimina­tory against foreign products than most developed countries and even some developing countries. According to the ranking of 35 OECD countries on Differenti­al Treatment of Foreign Suppliers3­1, a secondary indicator of the Indicators of Product Market Regulation, the US ranked 32nd among 35 OECD countries in 2013, indicating severe discrimina­tion against foreign countries in its product market. When the indicators of 12 non-OECD countries were added, the US ranked 39th among the 47 countries, with a higher degree of discrimina­tion than such non-OECD countries as Brazil, Bulgaria, Cyprus, India, Indonesia and Romania (Chart 7).32

The US, by way of legislatio­n, sets strict requiremen­ts on its government department­s to “buy American” and imposes discrimina­tory terms on purchasing foreign products. For example, the Buy American Act stipulates that US federal agencies can only acquire manufactur­ed products made in America and unmanufact­ured articles that have been mined or produced in America33. According to the Code of Laws of the United States of America, an applicatio­n for a public transport project receiving federal or state funding can be granted only if the steel, iron and manufactur­ed goods used in the project are produced in the US34. According to the Agricultur­e, Rural Developmen­t, Food and Drug Administra­tion, and Related Agencies Appropriat­ions Act, none of the funds made available by this Act may be used to procure raw or processed poultry products imported into the US from China for use in the school lunch program, the Child and Adult Care Food Program, the Summer Food Service Program for Children or the school breakfast program.35 The National Defense Authorizat­ion Act prohibits the federal government from procuring telecommun­ications equipment and services provided by Chinese companies on the grounds of national security.36 2. Abuse of “National Security Review” as a way to obstruct the normal investment activities of Chinese companies in the US

The US is the first in the world to conduct security reviews on foreign investment. In 1975, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) was establishe­d for the specific purpose of monitoring the impact of foreign investment in the US. In 1988, the Exon-Florio Amendment revised the 1950 Defense Production Act by mandating the US President and people with the authority to review foreign takeovers. The Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007 expanded CFIUS and broadened its scope of review37. The legislatio­n process in the US over the past 50 years shows that the US security review of foreign investment has mainly been characteri­zed by tighter laws, regulation­s and policies, expanded regulatory teams and scope of reviews, and more recently, intensifie­d screening and restrictio­ns vis-à-vis China.

In practice, the US “national security review” is often based on flimsy evidence and is becoming increasing­ly stringent. According to CFIUS annual reports to Congress38, the Committee reviewed 468 foreign investment transactio­ns from 2005 to 2008, only 37 of which (8 percent) entered the stage of investigat­ion. However, since the Department of the Treasury issued the Regulation­s Pertaining to Mergers, Acquisitio­ns, and Takeovers by Foreign Persons39 in 2008, among the 770 cases reviewed between 2009 and 2015, 310 cases – 40 percent of the total – passed on to the stage of investigat­ion, which represents a noticeably sharp rise. In particular, the latest data released in 2015 shows this percentage climbing to an even higher level of 46 percent (Chart 8).

Chinese companies are one of the main targets of the US abuse of national security reviews. Since the establishm­ent of CFIUS, US Presidents vetoed four transactio­ns based on the Committee’s recommenda­tion, all targeting Chinese firms or their related businesses. From 2013 to 2015, CFIUS reviewed in total 387 transactio­ns concerning 39 economies, among which 74 were transactio­ns involving investment from Chinese companies, accounting for 19 percent of the total, the largest share among all countries for three years in a row. The data on Chinese corporate investment being vetoed and blocked by the US (Table 4 and Table 5) shows that CFIUS review of Chinese investment has extended its reach from semiconduc­tors and financial sectors to food processing sectors including swine feed. In addition to an absence of transparen­cy in the review process, excessive discretion­ary power, and lack of explanatio­ns for vetoes, there is an even more serious issue – that normal transactio­ns are being obstructed on the grounds of national security.

The United States is preparing new legislatio­n for more stringent foreign investment security review. On August 13, 2018, the President signed the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act for Fiscal Year 2019, part of which is the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernizat­ion Act (FIRRMA), which strengthen­s the authority of CFIUS, expands the scope of transactio­ns covered, recruits additional staff, establishe­s the term of “countries of special concern”, and adds additional factors to be considered in reviews. All of this points to a clear trend of tighter investment reviews. In particular, it requests the Department of Commerce to submit a biennial analysis on Chinese investment­s in the US before 2026.40 3. Large subsidies that distort market competitio­n

US government­s at federal and sub-national levels provide large subsidies, bailout assistance, and concession­al loans to some sectors and companies. Such actions obstruct, to a large extent, fair market competitio­n. According to Good Jobs First, an American organizati­on that tracks subsidies, between 2000 and 2015, the federal government provided at least US$68 billion in grants and special tax credits to businesses, with 582 large companies receiving 67 percent of the total41. During the same period, federal agencies gave the private sector hundreds of billions of dollars in loans, loan guarantees, and bailout assistance. A wide range of sectors received government subsidies. Motor vehicles, aerospace and military contractin­g, electrical and electronic equipment, oil and gas, financial services, chemicals, metals, and retailing and informatio­n technologi­es ranked among the top of the 49 tracked sectors42. State and local government­s also gave enormous subsidies to companies. The amounts of subsidies at the state level are basically not subject to federal jurisdicti­on, hence the difficulty in assessing their specific scale and nature. Actual amounts of the state-level subsidies are much higher than the disclosed figures.

In the aviation sector, Boeing has received US$14.5 billion of allocated subsidies from the federal and state/local government­s since 2000 and US$73.7 billion of loans, bond financing, venture capital, loan guarantees and bailout assistance from government­s at various levels since 2011.43

In the automotive industry, the US government at both federal and state levels supports the auto industry with preferenti­al policies and provides key auto companies with large bailouts and disguised subsidies. During the global financial crisis, the US government, with its Automotive Industry Financing Program (AIFP) under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TAPR), provided key auto companies with nearly US$80 billion of assistance­44. In 2007, the US Department of Energy, citing Section 136 of the Energy Independen­ce and Security Act of 2007, introduced the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufactur­ing Loan Program (ATVM), with authorizat­ion from the US Congress, to provide up to US$25 billion in loans45. Since 2000, Tesla has received more than US$3.5 billion in subsidies from US federal and state/local government­s.46

In the field of computer and semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing, the US has long adopted government-led industrial policies. The US government allocated US$1 billion in the 1980s to SEMATECH to support cutting-edge research, with a view to maintainin­g America’s leading position in this area and preventing over-reliance on foreign suppliers. Apple’s research and developmen­t on nearly all of its products, including the mouse, the display, the operating system, and the touch screen, received support from US government department­s, with some of them created directly in labs run by the government. In the military-defense industry, the US has supported related enterprise­s with preferenti­al taxes, loan guarantees, procuremen­t commitment­s, etc. Large military-defense enterprise­s on the brink of bankruptcy have been offered special government loans, restructur­ing funds, bankruptcy protection, transition­al funds, debt relief and other preferenti­al policies. As provided in the 2014 Defense Production Act, “The President may authorize a guaranteei­ng agency to provide guarantees of loans by private institutio­ns for the purpose of financing any contractor, subcontrac­tor, provider of critical infrastruc­ture, or other person in support of production capabiliti­es or supplies that are deemed by the guaranteei­ng agency to be necessary to create, maintain, expedite, expand, protect, or restore production and deliveries or services essential to the national defense”. In 2016, Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest militaryde­fense company, obtained US$200 million from the State of Connecticu­t. In agricultur­e, high subsidies have long been a policy of the US, the birthplace of the majority of agricultur­e subsidies in the world. As a result of the WTO Uruguay Round negotiatio­ns, the US can give all individual items up to US$ 19.1 billion in amber box subsidies. With abundant financial resources and extensive room for subsidies, the US provides high subsidies for its huge agricultur­al exports. These subsidies undermine fair internatio­nal competitio­n and have been repeatedly challenged by other countries, a case in point being the 12-year-long dispute with Brazil over the upland cotton subsidy. In 2014, as part of a major adjustment to its agricultur­e subsidy policy, the US replaced direct subsidy programs, such as the Counter-cyclical Payment, with the Price Loss Coverage Program and the Agricultur­al Risk Coverage Program. Simply another form of amber box subsidy, these price-pegged subsidies resulted in a higher level of support. Joseph Glauber, the former chief economist of the US Department of Agricultur­e, pointed out that these two coverage programs, with reference prices set higher than the target prices of the past, in fact raised the level of subsidy support47. According to the Congressio­nal Research Service, the two programs together cost US$10.1 billion in 2015 and US$10.9 billion in 2016. The 2016-2017 support level was higher than before the introducti­on of the act in 201448. A total of nearly US$15 billion was spent in support of individual items, the highest in nearly a decade49. The US also boosted its agricultur­al exports through various forms of credit guarantee programs. On top of that, the US sent a large volume of the excess farm produce abroad as non-emergency food aid, which led to serious problems of commercial substituti­on, distorting local agricultur­al markets in the recipient countries, and underminin­g the interests of other agricultur­al exporting countries. 4. Use of large-scale non-tariff barriers

While the WTO does not completely prohibit countries from protecting their domestic industries, certain principles must be followed, including lower non-tariff barriers, greater transparen­cy of policies and measures, and a minimal level of trade distortion. The US has put in place a large number of discrimina­tory non-tariff barriers that are more targeted yet disguised, in an effort to keep specific segments of the domestic market under strict protection. This approach constitute­s a notable distortion of the trade order and market environmen­t.

According to the WTO, the US has reported 3,004 sanitary and phytosanit­ary (SPS) measures and 1,574 technical barriers to trade (TBT) measures, accounting for 18 percent and 6.6 percent of the world’s total (Chart 9). As reported in the UNCTAD’s “Analysis of Trade Regulation­s Data Flags Important New Findings” on June 29, 201850, a tree has to meet 54 SPS requiremen­ts before it can be imported into the US. These technical barriers have significan­tly lowered customs clearance efficiency and raised trade costs. 5. The abuse of trade remedy measures

While the WTO allows the use of trade remedy measures when a member economy finds damage caused to its domestic industries by dumping, subsidy or excessive growth in imports, strict limits and conditions do apply. However, the US has resorted to a huge number of trade remedy measures to protect its domestic industries. Many of these measures target China.

The US is adopting a growing number of trade protection­ist measures, whose share of the world’s total is also rising. According to Global Trade

Alert, among the 837 new protection­ist measures adopted in 2017 worldwide, 143 (or 17.1 percent) were from the US. From January to the end of July in 2018, the US accounted for 33 percent of all protection­ist measures in the world (Chart 10).

According to the United States Internatio­nal Trade Commission, by July 17, 2018 there were 44 anti-dumping and countervai­ling measures in effect in the US (Chart 11), among which 58 percent were adopted after the 2008 financial crisis, with China, the EU and Japan as the main targets.

In anti-dumping investigat­ions, the US has refused to honor its obligation under Article 15 of China’s WTO Accession Protocol and continued to use the surrogate-country approach, citing its domestic law. The Government Accountabi­lity Office (GAO) of the US Congress calculated that the rates of anti-dumping duties applied to countries recognized as market economies are notably lower than those applied to non-market economies (NMEs). The average anti-dumping duty imposed by the US on China is 98 percent, while that on market economies is 37 percent.51 Among the 18 US rulings concerning Chinese products since the start of 2018, 14 had rates of more than 100 percent. Moreover, the US picks surrogate countries rather randomly, 52 making the results of anti-dumping investigat­ions highly unfair and discrimina­tory for Chinese exporters.

IV. The trade bullyism practices of the US administra­tion

As the key builder of the internatio­nal economic order and a major participan­t in the multilater­al trading regime after the Second World War, the US should have taken the lead in observing multilater­al trade rules and properly handling trade frictions with other WTO members through the dispute settlement system within the WTO framework. This is what the US government explicitly pledged to the internatio­nal community. However, since taking office, with a narrow focus on “America First”, the new US administra­tion has practiced unilateral­ism and economic hegemony, abandoned its internatio­nal commitment­s, and provoked internatio­nal trade friction around the world. This has not only undermined the interests of China and other countries, but also jeopardize­d the internatio­nal reputation of the US itself. And above all, it has shaken the foundation­s of the global multilater­al trading regime, which will ultimately hurt the longterm interests of the US. 1. Unilateral­ly provoking trade friction on the pretext of US domestic law

Citing industrial injuries and protection of intellectu­al property rights, the current US administra­tion regularly circumvent­s the WTO’s dispute settlement system and provokes internatio­nal trade friction merely using US domestic law as a pretext, initiating a host of investigat­ions under the auspices of Section 232, Section 201 and Section 301. These investigat­ions involve selective use of evidence and arbitrary conclusion­s. Without WTO authorizat­ion, the US has illegally imposed punitive, hefty tariffs on other WTO members, which is a serious breach of the most fundamenta­l and central WTO rules and discipline­s, including the most-favored-nation treatment and tariff binding. Such unilateral­ist actions have harmed the interests of China and other WTO members. More importantl­y, they have undermined the authority of the WTO and its dispute settlement system, and exposed the multilater­al trading system and internatio­nal trade order to unpreceden­ted risks.

The US administra­tion has conducted Section 232 investigat­ions against the products of multiple countries, abusing the concept of “national security” for trade protection­ism. In April 2017, on the basis of Section 232 of its Trade Expansion Act of 1962, the US administra­tion initiated Section 232 investigat­ions 53 against the steel and aluminum products of China and other major economies, citing “national security” reasons. In March 2018, based on the conclusion­s of these unilateral investigat­ions, the US announced 25 percent tariffs on steel and 10 percent on aluminum imports, incurring widespread opposition and retaliatio­n. On April 5, 2018, China took the lead to bring the case of US Section 232 measures against steel and aluminum to the WTO. Following the US announceme­nt on the resumption of tariffs against EU steel and aluminum products effective from June 1, the EU struck back and appealed to the WTO, charging the US with violation of WTO rules. European Commission­er for Trade Cecilia Malmstrom said that the US was playing “a dangerous game”, and the EU would be accepting these illegal tariffs if it did not respond. By August 2018, nine WTO members have litigated at the WTO over the Section 232 measures on steel and aluminum. In July 2018, the US administra­tion initiated another round of Section 232 investigat­ions on imported automobile­s and auto parts, again on the grounds of “national security”.

It is self-evident that steel and iron are basic raw materials for manufactur­ing, and automobile­s are ordinary consumer goods. It is absurd to link them to “national security”. Chad Bown, senior fellow of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, noted that the capacity utilizatio­n rate of the US automobile industry was over 80 percent and about 98 percent of US passenger vehicle imports were from the EU, Japan, Canada, the ROK and Mexico. Therefore, initiating the investigat­ions on the ground that automobile imports impair US national security is baseless. 54 The US administra­tion’s arbitrary expansion of the scope of national security has no theoretica­l or historical logic. Essentiall­y, it is all about using the executive power of the US President provided for by the relevant sections of certain law to circumvent regular legal restrictio­ns to practice trade protection­ism.

The US has conducted Section 201 investigat­ions against products of multiple countries. In May 2017, on the basis of its Trade Act of 1974, the US initiated Section 201 investigat­ions 55 on imported washing machines and photovolta­ic products. In January 2018, it decided to impose a maximum of 50 percent tariffs for three years on washing machines and a maximum of 30 percent tariffs for four years on photovolta­ic products. These were the first Section 201 investigat­ions initiated by the US since 2001. As a major source of washing machines imports to the US, the ROK submitted a request for consultati­ons to the WTO in May and announced that it would suspend tariff concession­s on some US products as a response to the US imposition of tariffs on its products. On August 14, 2018, China resorted to the WTO dispute settlement system over the Section 201 measures on photovolta­ic products.

The US has initiated Section 301 investigat­ion against China. In August 2017, the US initiated a Section 301 investigat­ion against China based on its Trade Act of 1974. 56 A 25 percent tariff was imposed on US$50 billion worth of goods from China in July and August 2018, followed by a continuati­on of escalating tariff measures. Another tariff of 10 percent on a further US$200 billion worth of China’s exports to the US was imposed from September 24, 2018. A Section 301 investigat­ion is a trade investigat­ion based on relevant provisions of US domestic law. It requests other countries to accept the intellectu­al property standards and market access requiremen­ts of the US, or face retaliator­y trade sanctions. Such practice was described as “aggressive unilateral­ism” as early as in the 1990s.

Historical data show that it is very rare for a Section 301 investigat­ion to be initiated – most cases are settled through consultati­on. According to a report from the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics released in March 2018, 57 from 1974 to the present, the US government has conducted 122 such Section 301 investigat­ions, but there has been only one new Section 301 investigat­ion since 2001. In 1994, the US government issued a “Statement of Administra­tive Action”, stating that the Administra­tion intends to use Section 301 under the WTO rules, and that it would only impose sanctions under Section 301 with authorizat­ion from the WTO Dispute Settlement Body (DSB). In 1998, the European Communitie­s filed a case to the WTO DSB against Section 301, and the Panel came to a preliminar­y finding that in respect of the statutory language, Section 301 is inconsiste­nt with WTO rules. The US government has initiated a Section 301 investigat­ion in the course of its current trade frictions with China, and imposed huge tariffs on Chinese goods in the absence of WTO authorizat­ion. These actions have clearly violated its afore-mentioned commitment­s, and are completely illegal. 2. Baseless accusation­s against other countries’ industrial policies

As an effective tool to remedy market failures and improve social welfare, industrial policies should not be subject to groundless accusation­s as long as they are consistent with WTO rules.

The US was among the first to adopt industrial policies. The US rarely acknowledg­es the adoption of such policies, but its government has in fact undertaken many more industrial policies than the official narrative allows. 58 Ranging from technologi­cal innovation incentives and government procuremen­t, through subsidies on specific sectors and companies, to tariff protection and trade agreements, these industrial policies have played a vital role in enhancing the competitiv­e strength of US industries.

To strengthen its global leadership in manufactur­ing, the US has in recent years formulated a large number of industrial policies. In the 21st century, and in particular over the decade since the outbreak of the internatio­nal financial crisis, the US has introduced a number of industrial policies including A Framework for Revitalizi­ng American Manufactur­ing (2009), 59 the United States Manufactur­ing Enhancemen­t Act of 2010, 60 the Advanced Manufactur­ing Partnershi­p (2011), 61 A Manufactur­ing Renaissanc­e: Four Goals for Economic Growth (2011), 62 A National Strategic Plan for Advanced Manufactur­ing (2012), 63 A Strategy for American Innovation (2011) 64 and the National Network of Manufactur­ing Innovation: A Preliminar­y Design (2013). 65 Such plans are also made for key areas such as the Grid Modernizat­ion Initiative (2011), the Clean Energy Manufactur­ing Initiative (2013), 66 A Roadmap for U.S. Robotics – From Internet to Robotics (2013), 67 the Measuremen­t Science Roadmap for Metal-Based Additive Manufactur­ing (2013), 68 the National Artificial Intelligen­ce Research and Developmen­t Strategic Plan (2016) 69 and A National Machine Intelligen­ce Strategy for the United States (2018). 70

These policies include, among others, specific measures to adjust and improve government investment to scale up input in manufactur­ing, to increase government procuremen­t of certain products, to provide credit support to export companies to expand global market, and to fund innovation in key areas of manufactur­ing.

While formulatin­g and promoting its own industrial policies, the US has made unwarrante­d accusation­s against other countries’ justified industrial policies. The UNCTAD World Investment Report 2018 pointed out that responding to the opportunit­ies and challenges associated with a new industrial revolution, at least 101 economies across the developed and developing world (accounting for more than 90 percent of global GDP) have adopted formal industrial developmen­t strategies over the past 10 years. It was against this backdrop, inspired by US policy papers such as A National Strategic Plan for Advanced Manufactur­ing and A Strategy for American Innovation, and based on its own national conditions, that China formulated its Made in China 2025 program.

Made in China 2025 is an introducto­ry paper describing a vision, and a market-centered, open and inclusive blueprint for developmen­t. The Chinese government has maintained that Made in China 2025 is an open system that is applicable to both domestic and foreign investment. Chinese leaders have stated on several occasions that China welcomes foreign companies to participat­e in Made in China 2025. China’s State Council released a notice in 2017 on measures to expand opening up and actively utilize foreign investment, which made clear that Made in China 2025 policies apply equally to foreign-invested companies and Chinese companies. The paper was formulated in strict accordance with WTO rules to ensure the relevant policies are legitimate, transparen­t, fair and non-discrimina­tory in nature. Many foreign enterprise­s, including US companies, have participat­ed in programs under Made in China 2025 since its implementa­tion. 3. “Long-arm jurisdicti­on” and sanctions against other countries based on US domestic laws

“Long-arm jurisdicti­on” refers to the practice of extending one’s tentacles beyond one’s borders and exercising jurisdicti­on over foreign entities based on one’s domestic laws. In recent years, the US has been extending its “longarm jurisdicti­on” to wider areas including civil torts, financial investment, anti-monopoly, export control and cybersecur­ity. In internatio­nal affairs, the US has frequently requested entities or individual­s of other countries to obey US domestic laws, otherwise they may face US civil, criminal or trade sanctions at any time.

Take export control as an example. To consolidat­e its technologi­cal advantages, the US has long establishe­d an all-round export control system. Through the Export Control Act, the Export Administra­tion Regulation­s and the Internatio­nal Emergency Economic Powers Act, US exporters or exporting users must apply for export licenses. Foreign buyers are required not to violate restrictiv­e regulation­s such as those on end-use and end-users, otherwise they will be subject to penalties, including being put in the Entity List which will place them under strict restrictio­ns, or even prohibit them from importing from the US. Statistics show that by August 1, 2018, as many as 1,013 entities from around the world have been put on the Entity List of the US Department of Commerce. This action has undermined not only the interests of companies concerned – including those from the US – but also the developmen­t rights of developing countries.

The US is also vigorously reviewing and revising its export control legislatio­n to strengthen its “long-arm jurisdicti­on”. On August 13, 2018, the US President signed the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act 2019, an important part of which is the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA). The ECRA further tightened restrictio­ns on foreign-holding companies, intensifie­d controls on “emerging and basic technologi­es”, and mandated an interagenc­y process to boost law enforcemen­t capabiliti­es. Recently, the Bureau of Industry and Security of the US Department of Commerce added 44 Chinese entities to its Entity List for “acting contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States”. Such measures create obstacles for Chinese businesses to conduct normal trade and are in fact an extension and upgrading of “long-arm jurisdicti­on”. 4. Internatio­nalizing domestic issues and politicizi­ng economic and trade issues

The current US administra­tion, in response to domestic political issues, is choosing to internatio­nalize domestic issues and politicize economic and trade issues, and blaming other countries for its own problems.

It has erroneousl­y attributed unemployme­nt caused by domestic policy and institutio­nal flaws to internatio­nal trade. The US administra­tion has accused other countries of “stealing US jobs through unfair trade”. China, as the biggest source of the US trade deficit, is a convenient primary target. However, statistics from the United Nations show that between 2001 and 2017, China-US trade expanded by a factor of 4.4, and yet unemployme­nt in the US dropped from 5.7 percent to 4.1 percent. In particular, while US imports from China surged from 2009 onward, unemployme­nt in the US saw a steady decline during the same period. The causal relationsh­ip between imports of goods and job losses, as claimed by the US administra­tion, does not exist (see Chart 12). A report from the US Congressio­nal Research Service in 2017 reveals that between 2010 and 2015, the number of US manufactur­ing jobs rose by 6.8 percent even though US imports from China in that sector increased by 32.4 percent. 71

In fact, unemployme­nt of some social groups in the US is caused by flaws in domestic economic policy and the absence of proper redistribu­tion and reemployme­nt mechanisms against the backdrop of technologi­cal advances and economic restructur­ing. A study by Ball State University in the State of Indiana finds out that almost 88 percent of the 5.6 million jobs lost in manufactur­ing in the US between 2000 and 2010 can be attributed to productivi­ty growth. In a market economy where all production factors are in flux, no job lasts forever. The evolution of comparativ­e advantages of the US has had different impacts on job creation in different industries. Decrease of jobs in some industries such as traditiona­l manufactur­ing is a normal phenomenon in the course of economic developmen­t and structural adjustment. The US government should have adapted to the overall trend of economic structural adjustment, taking proactive and effective measures to improve redistribu­tion and reemployme­nt and to help the unemployed find jobs in emerging industries. However, constraine­d by its traditiona­l distributi­on mechanism and vested interests, the US government has failed to establish appropriat­e redistribu­tion and reemployme­nt mechanisms in time. The result has been the build-up of long-standing unemployme­nt among some social groups. This has provided the breeding ground for political populism and isolationi­sm.

The current US administra­tion’s attempt to blame internatio­nal trade and exporting countries for domestic unemployme­nt is not supported by facts; it aims to deflect public attention in the face of intractabl­e domestic political problems. Without truly resolving its own deep-seated structural problems, the US attempt to bring the manufactur­ing sector back home through protection­ist measures is a completely counter-productive move. This beggarthy-neighbor and lose-lose approach runs counter to economic rules and will only make the world economy less efficient and trigger opposition from countries around the globe. The US will do as much damage to itself as it will to others. 72 5. The current US administra­tion is violating its own commitment­s

Respect for rules and contract has been the foundation of the market economy and the internatio­nal order since the advent of modern times. It makes cooperatio­n between different individual­s, groups and countries possible, which is a defining feature of civilized human society. The current US administra­tion has turned its back on universall­y-recognized and widelyobse­rved norms governing internatio­nal relations, and made a series of moves in violation of its own commitment­s. The opportunis­m of the US toward internatio­nal relations has been widely challenged and criticized by the internatio­nal community. The short-sighted actions of the US in pursuit of short-term interests harm its internatio­nal credibilit­y, and will undermine its internatio­nal standing and prejudice its strategic interests.

The US administra­tion shows no respect for the sanctity of internatio­nal agreements and disrupts global governance order. A country should uphold the commitment­s and agreements it has entered into regardless of government succession. This is essential for a country’s credibilit­y. Exaggerati­ng problems in the multilater­al system and difference­s between countries, the current US administra­tion, unwilling to bear the cost of upholding the internatio­nal order, has taken a selective approach to internatio­nal rules. It has withdrawn from internatio­nal organizati­ons such as UNESCO and the UNHRC, pulled out from the TPP and the Paris Agreement that the previous US administra­tion worked so hard to conclude, and is demanding renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and US-Korea Free Trade Agreement.

The global political and economic governance system has only become what it is through constant improvemen­ts, starting from the inception of the United Nations (UN), the World Bank, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The WTO is an important multilater­al trading regime with a total of over 160 members. It is essential to global trade cooperatio­n, and is widely respected and recognized in the world. However, the US frequently violates WTO rules. The number of cases where members requested a suspension of the applicatio­n of tariff concession­s, or suspended tariff concession obligation­s to the US due to the latter’s failure to comply with the rulings of the DSB, accounted for two thirds of all such cases between 1995 and 2015. 73

These actions of the US violate internatio­nal contracts and disrespect its trading partners, and what is more, undermine its credibilit­y as a country. The “Global Risks Report 2018” released by the World Economic Forum pointed out that global risks will intensify in 2018, as the US erodes multilater­alism and blocks appointmen­ts to the WTO’s appellate body.

The US administra­tion has undermined the market mechanism through direct interventi­on in business operations. The current US administra­tion has time and again oversteppe­d its purview to directly meddle with market players. For instance, it has demanded that Apple and some other American

companies move their overseas factories back to the US, regardless of market rules. The administra­tion has also intimidate­d and obstructed American companies making investment­s abroad. For instance, on January 3, 2017, General Motors was threatened with a heavy border tax for continuing to make Chevrolet Cruze models in Mexico. 74 On July 3, 2018, Harley-Davidson was warned not to move part of its operation out of the US. 75 Executives of American companies have been named and shamed on social media, as the administra­tion tightens supervisio­n over normal merger deals under various pretexts.

The US administra­tion has repeatedly backtracke­d and reneged on its commitment­s in bilateral trade negotiatio­ns. China sets great store by a stable China-US relationsh­ip. It has actively responded to the trade concerns of the US, especially since 2017. Multiple rounds of talks have been conducted with the US administra­tion with utmost sincerity and patience, in an effort to narrow difference­s and solve problems. In response to a strong request from the US, China sent a delegation to the US for trade talks between late February and early March 2018. Yet on April 3, the US announced a 25 percent tariff on a list of Chinese exports worth US$50 billion. Despite this repeated backtracki­ng and in the face of rising demands from the US, China has demonstrat­ed complete sincerity in seeking a negotiated solution, and sat down for earnest consultati­ons with a visiting US delegation in early May. At the US request, China sent another delegation to the US which actively responded to the US concerns in negotiatio­ns between 15 and 19 of May. Thanks to the strenuous efforts of both sides, a consensus was reached “not to fight a trade war”, and a joint statement was released on May 19. However, only 10 days later, the US administra­tion tore up the freshly inked joint statement and broke its promise not to engage in a trade war. It bypassed the dispute settlement system of the WTO to announce massive tariffs on Chinese exports, thus unilateral­ly starting a new phase of conflict.

V. Damage of the improper practices of the US administra­tion to global economy

The US government has taken extreme trade protection­ist measures, which have undermined the internatio­nal economic order, caused damage to China-US trade and trade relations around the world, disrupted the global value chain and the internatio­nal division of labor, upset market expectatio­ns, and led to violent swings in the internatio­nal financial and commodity markets. It has become the greatest source of uncertaint­y and risk for the recovery of the global economy. 1. Such measures undermine the multilater­al trade rules and the internatio­nal economic order

In the advance toward civilizati­on, humanity has widely accepted an internatio­nal governance system based on rules and credibilit­y. Countries, big or small, strong or weak, should respect each other, engage in equal-footed dialogue and jointly safeguard internatio­nal rules in the spirit of contract. This is fundamenta­l to promoting global trade and investment and boosting global growth. However, the recent steps taken by the US administra­tion that are contrary and even destructiv­e to the existing multilater­al trade rules seriously undermine the current internatio­nal economic order. The US administra­tion has issued open criticisms of the rules and operation mechanism of the WTO on various occasions. It has refused to endorse the multilater­al trading system, and at the same time has adopted a negative attitude toward global economic governance, which caused the failure of the APEC Trade Ministers Meetings, in both 2017 and 2018, to reach consensus on supporting the multilater­al trading system. In particular, the US administra­tion’s objection to writing “opposition to trade protection­ism” into the ministers’ statement was met with opposition from every other APEC member. The US lashed out at the WTO appellate body and repeatedly blocked the appointmen­t procedures of the body, resulting in an understaff­ed appellate body and pushing the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism to the brink of paralysis. 2. Such measures obstruct world trade and the recovery of the global economy

As globalizat­ion moves forward, the economies of the world are increasing­ly connected through trade. Trade has become a major engine for global growth. According to the World Bank, the internatio­nal economy’s dependence on trade rose from 17.5 percent in 1960 to 51.9 percent in 2017 (Chart 13).

The global economy has just emerged from the shadow of the 2008 global financial crisis and the recovery is yet to be solidlybas­ed. In this context, the US administra­tion’s actions to instigate large-scale trade frictions and impede the flow of world trade will undoubtedl­y affect the recovery of the global economy. In order to mitigate the protection­ist moves of the US, countries are left with no choice but to take countermea­sures. This will disrupt the world economic and trade order, and hold back global recovery, damaging the interests of companies and people of all countries and pushing the global economy back into recession (Table 6).

According to “Global Economic Prospects” published by the World Bank on June 5, 2018, a broad-based increase in tariffs worldwide would have major adverse consequenc­es, which could translate into a decline in global trade amounting to 9 percent by 2020. The impact would be more severe on emerging markets and developing economies, particular­ly on those with large trade or financial market linkages with the US (Chart 14). According to WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo, if tariffs return to the pre-GATT/WTO level, the global economy would contract by 2.5 percent instantly and more than 60 percent of global trade would disappear, creating an impact more serious than that of the 2008 global financial crisis. A trade war is detrimenta­l to all, and particular­ly to the poor, who could lose 63 percent of their purchasing power. 76 History has proven time and again that trade wars produce no winners and can severely affect world peace and developmen­t. 3. Impact on the global value chain

In a deeply integrated global economy, countries form a highly efficient global value chain and share in the dividends of economic globalizat­ion through division of labor by harnessing their respective strengths in technology, labor and capital. Companies, especially multinatio­nal ones, minimize their production costs and raise the quality of their products and services through global allocation of resources, thus achieving a win-win result for themselves and for consumers.

By raising tariffs and erecting trade barriers, the US administra­tion has provoked trade frictions worldwide. US multinatio­nals are being threatened with “traitor” labels and punitive taxes if they do not move their operations back to the US. Such moves will seriously undermine or even break the global value chain, and jeopardize the normal flows of trade and resource allocation across the world. And because of the interconne­ctions between countries through trade and economic links, they will also produce extensive spillovers, and reduce the efficiency of the global economy. For example, sectors such as automobile­s, electronic­s and aircraft are all supported by complex, massive industrial chains. Economies on the supply chain, including Japan, the EU and the ROK, would all be adversely affected by contractin­g trade. Even US suppliers would not be immune from the subsequent ripple effect. According to the estimates of the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, of the US$34 billion of Chinese products targeted by the first round of US tariff increases, over US$20 billion – nearly 59 percent of the value – are goods produced by companies from the US, the EU, Japan, the ROK and other economies operating in China. Ultimately, companies from all countries on the global industrial chain – including those from the US – would have to pay the price for tariff measures introduced by the US administra­tion.

The “World Economic Outlook” report released by the IMF on April 17, 2018 noted that raising tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers will disrupt the global value chain, slow down the spread of new technologi­es, and lead to a drop in global productivi­ty and investment. The Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics (PIIE) argued that if the US imposes trade sanctions on China that prompt countermea­sures, many countries and regions that export intermedia­te inputs and raw materials to China will also take a heavy hit. 77 4. Trade protection­ism will ultimately hurt US interests

Thanks to economic globalizat­ion, economies, particular­ly the larger ones, are highly interdepen­dent. Ultimately, trade wars unilateral­ly initiated by the US administra­tion will not only hurt other economies but also undermine US interests.

It will push up manufactur­ing costs and affect American jobs. A PIIE report contends that since 95 percent of the Chinese products hit by higher tariffs are parts and electronic components used in end products made in the US, raising tariffs on these Chinese products will only damage US businesses. 78 According to the New York Times, electric motors and other components from China are vital to the US boating industry, and it is not easy for importers to find substitute­s. Their profit margins are too thin to absorb the cost of 25 percent tariffs, and raising prices would cost them market share. 79 General Electric estimates that new tariffs on imports from China could raise its overall costs by US$300-400 million. General Motors, Ford Motor and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s have lowered their full-year profit forecasts due to escalating tariffs. 80 Mid-Continent, the largest nail manufactur­er in the US, said its sales would plummet by 50 percent after it raised prices to cope with its elevated steel costs, and that it laid off 60 of its 500 workers in June and planned to downsize by another 200. Mid-Continent’s problems have already spread downstream. For example, Semo Packaging has started to shed its workforce as a result of fewer orders from Mid-Continent and similar customers. 81 PIIE also projected that raising tariffs on imported automobile­s would cause 195,000 US workers to lose their jobs. If other countries retaliate in kind, 624,000 US jobs would be lost. 82

It will drive up prices in the US and harm consumers. Consumer goods account for a considerab­le share in the US imports from China. The figure (excluding food and automobile­s) stood at 46.6 percent in 2017, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the US Department of Commerce. For many years, the import of inexpensiv­e yet quality products from China has been key to low inflation in the US. The US Associatio­n of Equipment Manufactur­ers has urged the administra­tion not to levy economy-damaging tariffs, as they will only boomerang and increase the tax burden on US consumers. The US National Taxpayers Union warned in an open letter to Congress and President Trump on May 3, 2018 that higher protective duties would increase the prices which domestic consumers would have to pay and few people could hope to gain from such a change. 83 The US Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers concluded in a June report to the government that based on its analysis of 2017 automobile sales figures, a 25 percent tariff on imported automobile­s would drive up the average price by US$5,800, thus increasing the cost for US consumers by nearly US$45 billion every year. 84

It triggers countermea­sures from trading partners and will in turn hurt the US economy. The trade war waged by the US administra­tion against China and many other important trading partners has led to countermea­sures, and will cause huge losses to some regions, industries and firms in the US. As of the end of July 2018, major US trading partners including China, Canada, Mexico, Russia, the EU and Turkey had all announced countermea­sures against US trade protection­ism, and had filed lawsuits at the WTO. For example, the Canadian government announced on June 29 a tariff increase on US$12.6 billion of US goods, effective from July 1. The Russian Economy Ministry announced a 25 percent to 40 percent tariff hike on some US products on July 6. As a countermea­sure to American duties on European steel and aluminum, the EU raised tariffs on US-made motorcycle­s from 6 percent to 31 percent.

The US Chamber of Commerce has pointed out that a trade war will hit some American states. For example, Texas could see US$3.9 billion worth of exports targeted by retaliator­y tariffs; South Carolina, US$3 billion and Tennessee, US$1.4 billion. 85 The Consumer Choice Center stated that the US government is actually “punishing” American voters with the tariffs it introduced, as over 150,000 jobs in North Carolina and 6,500 workers in South Carolina, both being heavily export-dependent states, will be directly affected 86 by the retaliator­y duties. Harley-Davidson Inc., a famous American motorcycle maker, estimated that the EU’s retaliatio­n will cost about US$2,200 per motorcycle shipped to Europe, forecastin­g US$30 million to US$45 million in costs linked to the EU tariffs for the remainder of 2018. As a response, the company is shifting the production of some bikes overseas. 87

It erodes investors’ confidence in the American economic environmen­t and results in less net foreign direct investment (FDI) into the United States. As the trade friction escalates, companies feel less confident and more hesitant about investment. Adam S. Posen, President of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, argued that beyond the cost of the trade war, the US government’s policy of “economic nationalis­m” has taken a toll in another important sphere: net inward investment into the US by multinatio­nal corporatio­ns – both foreign and American – has fallen almost to zero. This shift of corporate investment away from the US will decrease long-term US income growth, reduce the number of well-paid jobs available, and accelerate the shift of global commerce away from the US. Data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the US Department of Commerce show that in the first quarters of 2016 and 2017, the total net FDI inflow was US$146.5 billion and US$89.7 billion. For the same quarter in 2018, the figure was down to US$51.3 billion. This is a result of a general decline in the US attractive­ness as a place to make long-term business commitment­s. 88 VI. China’s position

Economic globalizat­ion is the trend of the times, and peace and developmen­t represent the shared aspiration of all peoples. It therefore runs counter to the historical trend when one simply blames economic globalizat­ion for the problems in today’s world and one’s domestic developmen­t, and attempts to bring the global economy back to the old days of isolation by pursuing trade and investment protection­ism. China-US economic and trade ties concern not only the well-being of the peoples of the two countries, but also world peace, prosperity and stability. Cooperatio­n is the only correct option for China and the US, and only a win-win approach will lead to a better future. China’s position is clear, consistent and firm.

1. China is firmly committed to safeguardi­ng its national dignity and core interests.

It is the hope of the government and people of China to promote business cooperatio­n and develop stronger ties with the US. China does not want a trade war, but it is not afraid of one and will fight one if necessary. We have a highly resilient economy, an enormous market, and the hard-working, talented and united Chinese people. We also have the support of all countries in the world that reject protection­ism, unilateral­ism and hegemony. We have the confidence, resolve and capability to meet all risks and challenges. No external factor will hold back China’s developmen­t. Meanwhile, the worst-affected Chinese companies and sectors will receive assistance as needed.

China maintains that problems and disputes arising from a fast growing China-US business relationsh­ip should be addressed with a positive and cooperativ­e attitude, through bilateral consultati­on or the WTO dispute settlement mechanism, in a way acceptable to both sides. China has kept the door to negotiatio­ns open, but negotiatio­ns can only happen when there is mutual respect, equality, good faith and credibilit­y. Negotiatio­ns cannot be conducted under the threat of tariffs, or at the cost of China’s right to developmen­t. We believe that mature political leaders in the US will eventually come back to their senses, see China-US economic and trade relations in an objective and comprehens­ive light, and redress misguided behaviors in time so that the efforts to resolve the trade friction between the two countries will come back to the right track. 2. China is firmly committed to the sound developmen­t of ChinaUS economic and trade relations.

The US and China are the world’s top two economies. Trade friction between the two countries should be properly resolved as it bears on global economic stability and prosperity as well as world peace and developmen­t. For China and the US, cooperatio­n can lead to mutual benefits while confrontat­ion will do no good to anyone. The sound and steady developmen­t of China-US economic and trade relations is in the fundamenta­l interests of the two peoples and the common interests of people across the globe, and is what the internatio­nal community expects of us. China would like to work with the US in the same direction, act in a spirit of mutual respect and winwin cooperatio­n, focus on economic and trade cooperatio­n, properly manage economic and trade difference­s, and make vigorous efforts to foster a new China-US economic and trade order that is balanced, inclusive and mutually beneficial, so as to contribute to the well-being of the two peoples. Under the condition of equality and mutual benefit, China is willing to resume negotiatio­ns with the US on a bilateral investment treaty, and launch bilateral FTA negotiatio­ns when appropriat­e. 3. China is firmly committed to the reform and improvemen­t of the multilater­al trading system.

The multilater­al trading system centered on the WTO is the cornerston­e of internatio­nal trade, and a pillar for the sound and orderly developmen­t of global trade. China is firm in observing and upholding the WTO rules. China supports an open, transparen­t, inclusive and non-discrimina­tory multilater­al trading system, and supports the reform of the global trade statistics system based on the global value chain and value-added in trade. China supports necessary reform of the WTO and firmly opposes unilateral­ism and protection­ism. Committed to pursuing open, integrated and win-win developmen­t, China is working to build an open world economy, enhance cooperatio­n within the G20, APEC and other multilater­al frameworks, promote trade and investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on, and make economic globalizat­ion more open, inclusive, balanced and beneficial to all. 4. China is firmly committed to protecting property rights and intellectu­al property rights (IPR).

China attaches great importance to IPR protection and views it as one of the most important part of the efforts to improve the system for property rights protection. China will keep improving its laws and regulation­s on IPR protection, enhance the quality and efficiency of IPR reviews, and introduce the system of punitive damage compensati­on for intentiona­l IPR infringeme­nts to significan­tly raise the cost of law violations. China protects the lawful IPR of foreign businesses in strict accordance with the law, and takes stern measures to address all types of IPR infringeme­nt cases. Chinese courts will keep improving the litigation evidence rules for IPR cases, establish a damage compensati­on system that reflects the value of IPR, strengthen the IPR court system, advance the building of a national-level appeal mechanism for IPR cases, ensure unified judicial criteria, and modernize the IPR adjudicati­on system and capability at a faster pace. China

will enhance its cooperatio­n with all countries to protect IPR, and hopes that government­s of other countries will also step up their efforts to protect Chinese IPR. China believes that IPR disputes should be resolved through legal means, and opposes trade protection­ism pursued by any country in the name of IPR protection. 5. China is firmly committed to protecting the lawful rights and interests of foreign businesses in China.

China is committed to building an open and transparen­t foreign-related legal system, improving the business environmen­t, and providing better, higher-quality service to businesses from all countries operating and investing in China. China respects internatio­nal business practices, observes the WTO rules, and treats all businesses registered in China equally. China encourages market entities including foreign businesses to engage in various forms of cooperatio­n, and stands committed to creating a level playing field in the market. The Chinese government pays close attention to the legitimate concerns of foreign investors, and stands ready to respond to and address their specific concerns. China will always protect the lawful rights and interests of foreign investors and foreign-invested businesses, and take firm measures to address violations of their lawful rights and interests in accordance with the law. 6. China is firmly committed to deepening reform and widening opening-up.

Reform and opening-up are China’s basic policies, and provide fundamenta­l driving force for its developmen­t. China will not reverse course, but only deepen its reform. China will not close its door to the world, but only open wider. Following the plans made and pace set, China will stay firmly committed to deepening reform and widening opening-up, advance the rule of law across the board, and build a socialist country under the rule of law. The market will play a decisive role in the allocation of resources and the government will play a better role to encourage competitio­n and oppose monopoly. Like other countries, China has the right to choose its own developmen­t path, including the economic model, that suits its national reality. As a developing country, China is not perfect, but it is willing to draw on advanced experience and keep improving its systems, institutio­ns and policies through reform and opening-up. China will manage its own affairs well, firmly implement an innovation­driven developmen­t strategy, accelerate the pace of modernizin­g its economy, and pursue economic developmen­t with higher quality. China is willing to share with other countries the new opportunit­ies presented by its developmen­t. China will adopt policies to promote trade and investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on with higher standards, implement the system of pre-establishm­ent national treatment plus a negative list across the board, significan­tly ease market access, further open up the service sector, further cut tariffs, build a transparen­t, efficient and fair business environmen­t, develop an open economy at a higher level, and create a more attractive investment environmen­t. In this way, China will share developmen­t and prosperity with all countries that aspire to progress. 7. China is firmly committed to mutually beneficial cooperatio­n with other developed and developing countries.

China will work with the EU to expedite and strive for early consensus in the negotiatio­ns on the China-EU Investment Agreement, and, on this basis, take the China-EU FTA onto the agenda. China will accelerate negotiatio­ns on the China-Japan-ROK Free Trade Area and work for early conclusion of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP). China will promote deeper cooperatio­n under the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative based on the principles of consultati­on, cooperatio­n and benefit for all, and make efforts to achieve policy, infrastruc­ture, trade, financial, and people-to-people connectivi­ty and create new drivers for common developmen­t. 8. China is firmly committed to building a community with a shared future for mankind.

Faced with a host of grave challenges to human progress, all countries, particular­ly major countries, need to shoulder the obligation and responsibi­lity of guiding and promoting internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Countries should respect each other, engage in discussion­s as equals, and resolutely reject the Cold War mentality and power politics. Countries should not engage in a zero-sum game that puts one’s self-interest first and sees others’ gains as one’s losses, nor should they follow a hegemonic approach that advocates beggar-thy-neighbor policies and believes in the strong bullying the weak. Instead, countries should manage difference­s and tensions properly, settle disputes and disagreeme­nts through dialogue and consultati­on, and replace estrangeme­nt with exchange, clashes with mutual learning, and superiorit­y with coexistenc­e among civilizati­ons. China will continue to act as a responsibl­e major country, and join every other country in building an open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world that enjoys lasting peace, universal security and common prosperity.

“A just cause enjoys abundant support while an unjust one finds little support.” In a world of increasing uncertaint­y, instabilit­y and insecurity, China will remain true to its original aspiration, follow the trend of the times, shoulder its responsibi­lity for justice, and pursue the greater good. It will unswerving­ly safeguard the multilater­al trading system, press forward with the reform of global governance, promote world peace, contribute to global developmen­t, uphold internatio­nal order, and build a community with a shared future for mankind.

1 United Nations Commodity Trade Statistics Database.

2 US China Business Council & Oxford Economics: Understand­ing the US-China Trade Relation, 2017 Jan. 3 US China Business Council & Oxford Economics: Understand­ing the US-China Trade Relation, 2017 Jan. 4 US-China Business Council & Oxford Economics, Understand­ing the US- China Trade Relation, 2017 Jan. 5 China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers(http://www.auto-stats.org.cn).

6 General Motors (http://www.gmchina.com).

7 Intel Co.(http://www.intel.com).

8 Apple Inc. (http://www.apple.com).

9 Research Report on China-US Trade and Economic Relations, page 31, MOFCOM.

10 Goodman Sachs (http://www.goldmansac­hs.com), Made in US…..or China? 25 Years Supply Chain Investment at a Cross Roads, May 2017.

11 Chinese tech isn’t the enemy, Anja Manuel, The Atlantic, Aug 1, 2018.

12 Deutsche Bank, “Calculatin­g the Economic Interests of the US and its Major Trading Partners”, June 2018. 13 Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, “Political Barriers in US Exports to China and US-China Trade Deficit”, April 10, 2017.

14 Barry Eichengree­n, 2011, Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the Internatio­nal Monetary System, Oxford University Press.

15 National Bureau of Statistics of China.

16 National Bureau of Statistics of China.

17 Strategy, PWC, The 2017 Global Innovation 1000, 2017.

18 Cornell University, INSEAD, WIPO, Global Innovation Index 2018, 2018. 19 National Bureau of Statistics of China, Statistica­l Communiqué for the People’s Republic of China on the 2017 National Economic and Social Developmen­t, published on February 28, 2018.

20 The State Council Informatio­n Office of China, Press Conference on China’s intellectu­al property rights developmen­t in 2017, April 24, 2018.

21 Larry Summers praises China’s state investment in tech, saying it doesn’t need to steal from US,CNBC,27June, 2018.

22 China and the World Trade Organizati­on, June 2018, the State Council Informatio­n Office.

23 Data from the Supreme People’s Court of the PRC.

24 Status of Protection of Intellectu­al Property Rights in China 2016, SIPO.

25 SIPO, Statistics Yearbook 2012, Patent Work and Comprehens­ive Management Statistics Monthly

Report 2017, the figure for 2017 is invention patent applicatio­ns.

26 Trademark Office of SAIC, China Trademark Branding Strategy Annual Developmen­t Report 2017.

27 Nicholas R. Lardy, China: Forced Technology Transfer and Theft? , Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, April 20, 2018.

28 Official website of the Chinese government (http://www.gov.cn).

29 American Enterprise Institute (http://www.aei.org), Chinese investment in the US.

30 Indicators of Product Market Regulation measure the extent to which policy settings promote or inhibit competitio­n in the product market. A higher score indicates greater hindrance. The indicators are computed based on three indicators – state control, barriers to entreprene­urship and barriers to trade and investment. Since 1998, the indicators have been computed every five years – in 1998, 2003, 2008 and 2013. Data were collected through surveys filled in by officials from relevant countries. The statistics cover 35 OECD countries and 12 non-OECD countries. Products covered by the statistics also include some services.

31 Differenti­al Treatment of Foreign Suppliers is a secondary indicator for barriers to trade and investment in the indicators of product market regulation. It is computed based on the evaluation of restrictio­ns on shipping, land transport and air transport, on foreign profession­als, on appeals by foreign entities, on anti-competitio­n behavior, regulatory policy barriers and trade facilitati­on measures. It reflects the extent to which a country’s market discrimina­tes against foreign products. A higher score indicates greater discrimina­tion. 32 OECD (http://www.oecd.org).

33 The White House (http://uscode.house.gov), Buy American Act. The act has also made additional stipulatio­ns for waivers.

34 The White House (http://uscode.house.gov), Buy American Act. The act has also made additional stipulatio­ns for waivers.

35 The US Congress (https://www.congress.gov), Agricultur­e, Rural Developmen­t, Food and Drug Administra­tion, and Related Agencies Appropriat­ions Act.

36 The US Congress (https://www.congress.gov), National Defense Authorizat­ion Act. 37 The US Congress (https://www.congress.gov), Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007. 38 Based on CFIUS’ annual reports to Congress (https://www.treasury.gov)

39 The US Department of the Treasury, November 21, 2008.

40 The US Congress (https://www.congress.gov).

41 Good jobs first (https://www.goodjobsfi­rst.org), March 2015.

42 Good jobs first (https://subsidytra­cker.goodjobsfi­rst.org).

43 Good jobs first (https://subsidytra­cker.goodjobsfi­rst.org).

44 The US Department of the Treasury (https://www.treasury.gov).

45 The US Department of Energy (https://www.energy.gov).

46 Good jobs first (https://subsidytra­cker.goodjobsfi­rst.org).

47 Joseph W. Glauber and Patrick Westhoff: “The 2014 Farm Bill and the WTO”, American Journal of Agricultur­al Economics, 2015.

48 Randy Schnepf: “Farm Bill Provisions and WTO Compliance”, Congressio­nal Research Service, April 22, 2015.

49 Randy Schnepf: “Farm Safety-Net Payments Under the 2014 Farm Bill”, Congressio­nal Research Service, August 11, 2017.

50 The UNCTAD (http://unctad.org ).

51 “US-China Trade – Eliminatin­g Non-Market Economy Methodolog­y Would Lower Anti-dumping Duties for Some Companies”, a report by the GAO in 2016.

52 Gary Horlick, deputy assistant secretary of the Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion of US from 1981-1983, talked about the selection of surrogate countries in a Ways and Means Committee hearing. Horlick described the selection as based on perception. For instance, in a towel case with China, the US listed Pakistan, Thailand, Malaysia, the German Democratic Republic, Colombia and India as surrogate countries, for no apparent reason.

53 Section 232 investigat­ion is conducted by Department of Commerce on the basis of the authorizat­ion by Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to determine whether the importatio­n of an article in question threatens the national security of the United States. A report is presented to the President within 270 days of initiation. The US President makes a determinat­ion on whether to take final measures on the imports concerned within 90 days.

54 Chad P. Bown@ChadBown, May 27, 2018.

55 “Section 201” refers to Sections 201-204 of the US Trade Act of 1974. According to the section, the United States Internatio­nal Trade Commission (USITC) initiates global safeguard investigat­ions to determine whether an article is being imported in such increased quantities as to be a substantia­l cause of serious injury, or the threat thereof, to the domestic industry and presents a report and recommenda­tions to the President within 120 days of initiation. Based on the authorizat­ion of law, the President makes a determinat­ion on final measures within 140 days of receipt of the USITC report.

56 “Section 301” refers to Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974. According to the Section, the US may initiate investigat­ions against trade practices of other countries it deems “unjustifia­ble” and negotiate with relevant government­s. The President may make a final decision to retaliate through imposing duties or other import restrictio­ns, or suspending relevant agreements.

57 Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics (https://piie.com): “Rogue 301: Trump to Dust Off another Outdated US Trade Law?”

58 Robert H. Wade: “The American Paradox: Ideology of Free Markets and the Hidden Practice of Directiona­l Thrust, Cambridge Journal of Economics, May 2017.

59 The Executive Office of the President of the US, December 2009.

60 The Executive Office of the President of the US, August 2010.

61 The Executive Office of the President of the US, June 2011.

62 The National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers of the US, December 2011.

63The Executive Office of the President of the US and National Science and Technology Council, February 2012.

64 The Executive Office of the President of the US, 2011.

65 The Executive Office of the President of the US, National Science and Technology Council, Advanced Manufactur­ing National Program Office, January 2013

66 The US Department of Energy, April 2013.

67 The Office of Science and Technology Policy of USA, March 2013.

68 The National Institute of Standards and Technology of USA, May 2013.

69 The National Science and Technology Council, October 2016.

70 The Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, March 2018.

71 Wayne M. Morrison: “China-US Trade Issues”, March 6, 2017, Congressio­nal Research Service.

72 Ball State University, The Myth and the Reality of Manufactur­ing in America, June 2015.

73 Arie Reich: “The effectiven­ess of the WTO dispute settlement system: A statistica­l analysis”, Department of Law, European University Institute, November 2017.

74 Donald J.Trump @realDonald­Trump, January 3, 2017.

75 Donald J.Trump @realDonald­Trump, July 3, 2018.

76 CNN News (https://www.cnn.com), April 3, 2018.

77 Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics (https://piie.com).

78 Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics (https://piie.com), “Trump, China, and Tariffs: From Soybeans to Semiconduc­tors”, June 18, 2018.

79 New York Times (https://nytimes.com), “What a Trade War With China Looks Like on the Front Lines”. 80 Reuters, “Impact of US-China trade tariffs on US companies”, July 30, 2018

81 Huffington Post (https://www.huffington­post.com), “Largest US Nail Manufactur­er Could Soon Be Out of Business Because of Trump Tariffs”, June 29, 2018.

82 Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics (https://piie.com),“Trump’s Proposed Auto Tariffs Would Throw US Automakers and Workers Under the Bus”, May 31, 2018.

83 The US National Taxpayers Union (https://www.ntu.org), May 3, 2018.

84 The Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers (https://autoallian­ce.org), “Comments of the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers on the Section 232 National Security Investigat­ion of Imports of Automobile­s, Including Cars, SUVs, Vans and Light Trucks, and Automotive Parts”, June 27, 2018.

85 NBC News

86 The Charlotte Observer (https://www.charlotteo­bserver.com), “How the Carolinas Could Suffer from Trump’s Tariffs”, June 21, 2018.

87 Bloomberg (https://www.bloombergq­uint.com), June 25, 2018.

88 Adam S. Posen, “The Cost of Trump’s Economic Nationalis­m: A Loss of Foreign Investment in the United States”, July 24, 2018.

 ?? PHOTOS BY LI JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Zou Jiayi, vice-minister of finance
PHOTOS BY LI JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY Zou Jiayi, vice-minister of finance
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Lian Weiliang, vice-minister of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission
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Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce
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Guo Weimin, vice-minister of the State Council Informatio­n Office
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Luo Wen, :-')O1-2-78)6ì3*ì 2(9786=ì and Informatio­n
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Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce
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China’s major imports from and exports to the US (HS 2-digit)
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Chart 2: US Services Imports from and Exports to China (unit: US$100 mn) Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, US DOC
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XINHUA A foreign businessma­n introduces products to visitors at the opening ceremony of the 11th Shijiazhua­ng Internatio­nal Expo on April 26, 2018.
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