China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tariff row shows ‘US needs reality check’

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The United States’ economic policy mandarins need a reality check as their additional tariffs on several import items, ostensibly to combat perceived Chinese “economic aggression”, are unjustifia­ble, senior business executives said.

The US should realize that China will continue to influence global economic indicators positively in the long run, they said.

Their comments came after the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive announced late last month 25 percent tariffs on an additional $16 billion worth of Chinese imports starting Thursday.

China responded in kind to the US measure.

Wu Dongxu, general manager of the Foreign Investment Department at Beijing-based Transconti­nental Management Consultanc­y, urged experts to analyze the Trump administra­tion’s tariff threats in a more political light.

He stressed while it is economical­ly irrational for the Trump-led US to create trade frictions, it might be politicall­y rational to do so. Negotiatio­ns between the two countries would be long and bumpy, he warned.

Wu called the US argument that China’s Stateowned enterprise­s or SOEs are government-directed and not market-led “ironic”. “When they complain about ‘intellectu­al property theft’, they are talking about deals struck between private US companies acting in their own best interest,” Wu said.

In terms of the production value chain, the US manufactur­ing sector not only accounts for the most profitable industries, but also enjoys the highest added value and is actively allocating low-value segments overseas, said Long Guoqiang, vice-president of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

The US already imposed tariffs worth $34 billion on Chinese goods in July and China had to take countermea­sures of similar magnitude. The US also threatened to levy 25 percent duty on $200 billion worth of Chinese products on Aug 1.

Gao Yan, chief executive officer of the China unit of German industrial giant Thyssenkru­pp AG, said that in terms of economic volume, market scale, capacity and investment, China has become a major player in the internatio­nal economy and trade, exerting pivotal influence on world trade.

Since the global financial crisis in 2008, China has contribute­d over 30 percent of world economic growth every year on average. In 2017, China contribute­d around 34 percent of global growth and accounted for 15 percent of the world economic aggregate, data from the Ministry of Commerce showed.

“If China maintains a healthy growth, it would help to promote the global economy,” Gao said. “On the other hand, if China suffers economic challenges, such as overcapaci­ty in some sectors, then it would become a global challenge.”

Gao said China today is more than a participan­t. As the reform and opening-up policy deepens and the Belt and Road Initiative advances, China will become a force in technologi­cal innovation, market demand, globalizat­ion and formulatio­n of global trade rules.

“China has complete manufactur­ing industrial chains and is equipped with highqualit­y technical workers. The existing global industrial layout will also not change in a short time, which will help reduce uncertaint­y,” said Sun

 ?? A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors admire Siemens’ medical equipment on display at the 30th Beijing Internatio­nal Medical Equipment Expo on March 23. The German behemoth opened a new office in Beijing in June, reinforcin­g its view that China is now the key to the global trading system.
A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors admire Siemens’ medical equipment on display at the 30th Beijing Internatio­nal Medical Equipment Expo on March 23. The German behemoth opened a new office in Beijing in June, reinforcin­g its view that China is now the key to the global trading system.

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