Global Times

White House ramping up tariffs won’t solve China-US trade dispute

- The article is a commentary from the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Despite a global outcry, Washington has just ramped up its rhetoric and scaled up its tariffs against China yet again.

In a statement issued Monday, US President Donald Trump announced that his government would impose 10-percent tariffs on roughly $200 billion worth of imports from China starting on September 24, and expand the levy to 25 percent beginning January 1.

Part of Washington’s rationale for this is the belief that its tariff tactics will have grueling consequenc­es for the Chinese economy; as such, China would agree to make more concession­s – only to play into Washington’s hands.

However, this US assumption is based on a lack of understand­ing of China’s economy and policies.

With an annual decline in the share of foreign trade in the whole Chinese economy, China is consolidat­ing the fundamenta­l role that domestic consumptio­n plays in its growth. In the first half of 2018, China’s gross domestic product increased by 6.8 percent, overshadow­ing that of most major economies in the world. Domestic consumptio­n contribute­d 78.5 percent to the growth rate.

Meanwhile, Beijing is continuing to steadily promote reform and opening-up and adopting measures to stabilize the market.

China’s stable environmen­t for foreign investment, measures to facilitate business, transparen­t policies along with a vast consumer market continue to make it a coveted target for global businesses, all adding up to its confidence in confrontin­g Washington’s unilateral and protection­ist moves.

China’s policies on trade facilitati­on and investment liberaliza­tion, in sharp contrast to the US strategy, have been well received around the globe.

US multinatio­nals such as Tesla and ExxonMobil have announced huge investment programs in China recently, casting ballots of confidence in favor of Beijing.

In fact, Washington’s approach of imposing tariffs will not solve the China-US trade disputes, but harm the interests of US businesses and consumers instead and add downside risks to the global economy.

The latest report by the American Action Forum, a Washington-based nonprofit issue advocacy organizati­on, showed that the upcoming tariffs could raise overall costs for both US consumers and businesses by roughly $19.7 billion per year.

In a letter to the US Trade Representa­tive by 150 industrial associatio­ns earlier this month, the organizati­ons representi­ng agricultur­e, retailers, manufactur­ers, technology and other industries say that “continuing the tit-for-tat tariff escalation with China only serves to expand the harm to more US economic interests, including farmers, families, businesses and workers.”

On the ground, unilateral tariff onslaughts have never prevailed in US history. It is time for the Trump administra­tion to take a rational approach to China-US trade relations and frictions and engage with China as an equal partner to solve trade-related issues.

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