Global Times

China, India should jointly resist US tariffs

- By Guan Zhaoyu and Yang Yuanhang Guan Zhaoyu is assistant research fellow with Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China (RDCY). Yang Yuanhang is an intern with the RDCY. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

After the US government recently decided to impose a 25-percent tariff on $50 billion worth of Chinese imports, China immediatel­y announced additional 25-percent duties on 659 US goods worth $50 billion.

At the same time, in response to the American steel and aluminum tariffs, the Indian government has proposed tariff hikes ranging from 10 percent to 50 percent on 30 items imported from the US. Beijing and New Delhi have chosen to stand together in the face of Washington’s unilateral trade measures.

The protection­ism advocated by US President Donald Trump severely undermines the free trade system and jeopardize­s global commerce.

A study by the US thinktank Brookings Institutio­n showed that if a minor trade war breaks out, where tariffs rise by 10 percent, most economies will have their GDP reduced by 1 to 4.5 percent, with the US losing 1.3 percent of GDP; if tariffs rise 40 percent, it would plunge the global economy into what is like the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Trump’s zero-sum trade policy will cause direct and indirect damage to China, India and even the entire Asia. Trade will bear the brunt.

In 2017, the US was China’s largest export market and China was also the US’ largest import market. In addition, the US is India’s largest export destinatio­n and the second largest source of imports. The rising trade dependence of China and India with the US proves that bilateral free trade is a positive game. If the US launches a trade war on the pretext of the so-called “trade deficit,” all three parties will suffer.

Recently, the Chinese stock market has been affected by sentiments. However, the Chinese economy is prospectiv­e in the long-term and full of resilience. The ups and downs of the stock market are nothing extraordin­ary. The key is to pay attention to the psychologi­cal expectatio­ns it reflects. On the basis of today’s global value chain, the trade war triggered by the US will inevitably have a wider psychologi­cal impact, causing uncertaint­y in Asian monetary and trade policies.

In past three decades, the Asian economy has risen rapidly, as shown by China and India. The two countries embarked on urbanizati­on and industrial­ization around the same time in the 1990s and have achieved rapid trade growth, becoming the world’s second and third largest economies respective­ly.

Through history, it has been unpreceden­ted that two large economies have emerged simultaneo­usly on the same continent. At the same time, the two economies are not complete competitor­s, but rather complement­ary.

India has remarkable advantages in IT, service and pharmaceut­ical sectors; China leads in manufactur­ing as a “world factory.” The world’s two largest emerging economies have reached a new high in economic and trade cooperatio­n. In 2017, China-India bilateral trade reached a record of $84.4 billion, up by 20.3 percent year-on-year. China has become India’s largest trading partner and India is China’s largest trading partner in South Asia.

The continuous expansion of trade between China and India can be foreseen, and free trade is a strong driving force for economic developmen­t. Long-term developmen­t requires joint defense of the free trade system. In the era of globalizat­ion, if China suffers severe economic damage because of the US, India can hardly escape being shortchang­ed by Washington.

Economic and trade cooperatio­n is an accelerato­r for Sino-Indian relations. The two countries have broad space for cooperatio­n in the fields of infrastruc­ture, informatio­n technology and health care. Among them, cross-border e-commerce is quite eye-catching. India has become the globe’s fastest growing e-commerce market, with an annual increase of about 100 million internet users. In 2017, the most popular e-commerce products in India were mobile phones, clothing and food, at which Chinese exports have comparativ­e advantage.

In addition, Paytm Mall, India’s most active e-commerce platform, has about 40 percent of its goods imported from China. The complement­arity in trade and economic cooperatio­n has provided tremendous demand for cross-border e-commerce and can become a key area for future cooperatio­n. With rising cooperatio­n, China and India have jointly contribute­d enormously to global developmen­t and maintenanc­e of the multilater­al trading system.

The April’s informal meeting of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province opened up a new phase for further cooperatio­n. Now when the US’ unilateral­ism undermines the interests of all countries and jeopardize­s the free trade system, China and India should join hands to shield free trade.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

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