Global Times

Trump’s trade war could boomerang

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The White House said President Donald Trump will announce Monday afternoon ( EST) that the US will seek a Section 301 investigat­ion into China’s trade practices, including the alleged forced technology transfer and intellectu­al property theft.

Section 301 was used to impose tariff s against Japanese motorcycle­s and steel in the 1980s. The US is also considerin­g a probe of Asia’s “four little dragons,” namely Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea, under Section 301.

Trump holds a simplistic view of internatio­nal relations, especially China- US ties. He stubbornly believes that the US has suff ered losses from the current internatio­nal trade system while China has gained an advantage. The US’ overall trade defi cit in 2016 was $ 502.3 billion, with its defi cit with China exceeding $ 300 billion. Perhaps this has irritated Trump, making him impatient to grasp an accurate scenario of China- US trade.

But Section 301 is a US law and cannot regulate internatio­nal trade. No US government likes to see a huge trade defi cit. But the defi cit keeps rising, which indicates domestic imbalance. Trump cannot use Section 301 at will as a lever against China, another trade giant.

Beijing does not need to be overly concerned with a trade confl ict with the US. Smaller economies have resisted the pressures of Section 301, let alone the Chinese mainland which boasts of a huge trade volume.

Japan and Asia’s “four little dragons” depend on Washington politicall­y and economical­ly. Strategica­lly, their prosperity is a by- product of US prosperity. The US has nothing to fear when it deprives these countries of their rights.

But the Chinese mainland is independen­t politicall­y and economical­ly. Once Section 301 is enforced, China is expected to retaliate. The Trump administra­tion should have second thoughts about putting pressure on China on trade and avoid a full- blown trade war.

China should make use of the WTO mechanism to sue the US for trade protection­ism. The trade policies of the Trump administra­tion have been widely criticized. Although fi ling a lawsuit with the WTO is time- consuming, it is highly likely that China would win.

Washington is more experience­d than China in trade wars. But US so- ciety and opinion can hardly bear their own losses. If a China- US trade war starts, many of those who now support a hardline stance toward China would turn against the Trump administra­tion.

The US has linked the Sino- US trade issue with North Korea’s nuclear issue, which is illogical. A trade war between the two will aff ect the general climate of bilateral ties, but a trade war is far from the entirety of Sino- US ties. The two will continue to maintain their complex bilateral relations.

The US frequently sends warships to patrol the South China Sea, and now it’s ramping up trade pressure on China. China should turn its passivity around. China will not act as an aggressive provocateu­r, but we should make Washington realize that China is not the one to be messed around with.

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