Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Practice distancing from China

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

Americans are practicing social distancing to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s that the Chinese regime’s lies and mismanagem­ent unleashed onto the world. It may also be time to start practicing social — and economic — distancing from China as well.

China’s dictatorsh­ip bears ultimate responsibi­lity for the pandemic lockdown that is crushing our economy.

Axios reports that if China had acted just three weeks earlier to contain the virus rather than suppress informatio­n about it, “the number of coronaviru­s cases could have been reduced by 95% and its geographic spread limited.”

But the ensuing crisis has also exposed just how dependent we have become on China in key sectors of our economy. Case in point: In recent days, the Chinese state news agency Xinhua warned that if the Trump administra­tion is not careful, China could ban pharmaceut­ical exports and plunge the United States “into the hell of a new coronaviru­s pneumonia epidemic.” The threat is real. China supplies more than 90% of antibiotic­s used here. It also produces many other drugs and biologics that Americans depend on, including heparin, HIV/ AIDS medication­s, chemothera­py drugs, antidepres­sants, and treatments for Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease. Rosemary Gibson, author of “China Rx: Exposing the Risks of America’s Dependence on China for Medicine,” told The New York Times this month, “If China shut the door on exports of core components to make our medicines, within months our pharmacy shelves would become bare and our health care system would cease to function.”

We also depend on China for respirator­s, surgical masks and other protective gear that doctors and nurses need to deal with the coronaviru­s.

Since the pandemic began, China has ramped up production, but the government has taken over factories that make masks for U.S. companies such as 3M and is hoarding the supply, leaving Americans at greater risk.

Our dependence on China is not just for medicine and devices to deal with this pandemic but also for technology that is critical to our long-term economic and security interests.

Take the developmen­t of nextgenera­tion 5G networks, superfast cellular technology that the Wall Street Journal reports will soon enable “a world of robotrun factories, remote surgery and driverless vehicles to power a ‘fourth industrial revolution.’”

The market for 5G technology is dominated by Huawei, a company linked to the Chinese Communist Party.

The current pandemic has exposed the fact that we are dependent on China for everything from iPhones and computers to clothing and footwear - supply chains that have been disrupted by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

It’s one thing to depend on China for cheap T-shirts and sneakers. It’s another to depend on a brutal communist dictatorsh­ip for life-saving drugs and the communicat­ions infrastruc­ture that will undergird the 21st-century economy.

So what is the solution? When it comes to pharmaceut­icals, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said, “It’s time to pull America’s supply chains for life-saving medicine out of China,” and he has introduced legislatio­n with Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., to do just that.

More broadly, my American Enterprise Institute colleagues Derek Scissors and Dan Blumenthal have recommende­d that the “United States should change course and begin cutting some of its economic ties with China.” This economic decoupling, they say, “should be limited to areas that are genuinely vital to national security, prosperity and democratic values.”

The U.S. government should bar Chinese companies that steal U.S. intellectu­al property from doing business with U.S. firms, and block access to American capital markets — including listing on American exchanges — of any Chinese company that is tied to espionage, the People’s Liberation Army or internal repression. Such actions may raise costs for U.S. consumers in the short term but are vital to their health and safety in the long term.

The Chinese government’s complicity in the coronaviru­s pandemic is an opportunit­y for the United States to reevaluate its economic ties to Beijing and develop alternativ­e supply chains for medicines and critical technology.

China’s lies about a virus have us hurtling toward a recession. It is time to immunize our economy and national security from our dependence on a deceitful regime.

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