New Straits Times

‘US, China need to cease self-defeating hostilitie­s’

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NEW YORK: After months of feint, bluster and desultory attempts at compromise, the phony trade war between the United States and China has given way to the real thing. For the sake of both countries, these self-defeating hostilitie­s need to cease — and the principal responsibi­lity for this rests with the US, which has fired the first shot.

The new tariffs — a 25 percent levy applied to an initial US$34 billion (RM137.3 billion) in goods, with another US$16 billion targeted — will harm consumers and companies in both countries.

The US tariffs will raise prices at home and punish US companies that import intermedia­te goods such as semiconduc­tors and plastics. In the same way, the retaliator­y tariffs China has promised will hurt Chinese buyers as well as slam US farmers and workers.

That’s just for now. The much greater concern is long-term damage to the rules and institutio­ns of global trade. Trump has threatened to withdraw the US from the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO). In any case, his tariffs violate the spirit and probably the letter of commitment­s the US has made as a member. This destroys the stability that has allowed multinatio­nals to build efficient global supply chains.

It will also drive US trade partners to develop new agreements without the US. That’s already happening. Japan revived the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p after Trump rejected it. China and the European Union are discussing how to modernise global trade rules. Talks about the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p — a trade pact encompassi­ng 16 Asian nations — have gained new momentum. It cannot serve US interests to stand aside as the global trading system evolves.

China is being equally shortsight­ed. Its ambition to foster high-tech industries is admirable, but its methods are unwise, and in some cases, illegal.

Heavy subsidies at best skirt WTO rules; they’re wasteful as well. Protecting key sectors will undermine China’s competitiv­eness and spur retaliatio­n in the US and Europe, hobbling the efforts of Chinese firms to gain expertise and access to advanced technology.

China’s government, as much as America’s, needs to stop and think. Its harassment of foreign companies and broken promises about reform and liberalisa­tion have eroded the support the country once commanded in the Western business community.

Untroubled by the need to win elections, Chinese leaders may believe they can bear more pain than Trump can. They might be right about that, but the erosion of the global economic order will hurt China’s economy as much as any other, and probably more. And Chinese “concession­s” on market access and protection of intellectu­al property would actually serve the country’s longterm interests.

Trump started this fight, though, and the duty to end it rests largely with him. Much of the thinking that underlies his complaints against China (especially the notion that bilateral trade imbalances are proof of malfeasanc­e) is nonsense. The right course is to pursue legitimate trade complaints through channels such as the WTO that the US designed for the purpose — a system that can work, given the chance and a fresh commitment of US leadership. Short of that, in the current dispute, he should seek minor concession­s he can call victory, then back off as soon as possible.

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