Global Times - Weekend

US to pay for ‘reckless behavior’

China determined to safeguard interests: FM

- By Yang Sheng

China urged the US on Friday not to underestim­ate China’s determinat­ion and capability, and the price that the US will pay for its “arbitrary and reckless behavior,” and experts said that more retaliatio­n will follow.

After US President Donald Trump signed a tariffs memorandum against China on Thursday, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said that “China benefitted far more from trade with the US, meaning retaliatio­n could be difficult for Beijing,” AFP reported.

“Some people” from the US are “too arrogant and have misjudged the situation,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying said at Friday’s routine press conference. “Do not underestim­ate China’s determinat­ion and capacity to safeguard its legitimate interests, and the price that the US will have to pay for its arbitrary and reckless behavior.”

When asked about how China will retaliate, Hua said, “It is ‘impolite’ not to ‘reciprocat­e.’ We will accompany the US to the end.”

Earlier Friday, the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) said in a statement that “the US disregards the fact that China is increasing protection on intellectu­al property, the rules of WTO, and voices from industry,” and a trade war is bad for both countries and the rest of the world. “It creates a very bad precedent.”

“China hopes the United States will pull back from the brink, make prudent decisions, and avoid dragging bilateral trade relations to a dangerous place,” said the statement.

There is “hair on fire” concern that the proposed tariffs and restrictio­ns on Chinese investment in the US will lead to retaliatio­n, and measurably hurt the economies of the US, China, and the rest of the world, William Zarit, chairman of American Chamber of Commerce in China, said in a note sent to the Global Times on Friday.

However, a trade war with the US is not entirely bad for China, Mei Xinyu, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, told the Global Times.

“Trump’s motives are very likely to pressure China into submission and gain more benefits

from China, rather than totally cutting off SinoUS trade ties, so we can also make some trouble for him,” he said.

Commenting on US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross’ talk that China’s simplest solution to reduce its trade gap with the US is to buy more US liquefied natural gas (LNG), Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, said the US is making a “stupid move.”

“China, in its huge demand for LNG, is naturally inclined to import more US LNG and has actually imported some in 2017 and holds significan­t orders under long-term contracts, but waging a trade war against China will effectuall­y stop such momentum,” Lin told the Global Times on Friday.

The MOFCOM announced Friday morning it will impose tariffs on US imports worth $3 billion in a bid to offset its loss incurred by the US’ decision to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

The ministry plans to impose 15 percent tariff on 120 types of products, like fruits, nuts, wine and seamless tubes, worth $977 million. A 25 percent tariff will be imposed on products that include pork and recycled aluminum products.

This is just the beginning, and “China’s retaliatio­n will specifical­ly target the Trump administra­tion and its protection­ist team, so targeting the industries among the [US] states that support Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al election would be effective,” Mei noted.

Free trade vs protection­ist

Trump’s act of protection­ism will force major economies that support free trade to stand closer with China, including major countries of the EU like Germany and France, and China will unite these economies to champion free trade, which is also a form of retaliatio­n, said Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs at the Renmin University of China.

“This is not just a trade war between China and the US, but a confrontat­ion between protection­ist forces and the economies supporting free trade,” Wang noted.

Germany condemned Trump’s plans to impose sanctions against China on Thursday, CNBC reported. “We consider these tariffs unlawful,” Chancellor Angela Merkel told lawmakers in the German parliament Wednesday. She added that Germany was convinced Washington’s threat to impose protection­ist policies would ultimately hurt everyone.

Impact to ordinary people

Ordinary Chinese people, in general, are very calm about the trade war. A Beijing resident surnamed Su, 26, told the Global Times that “actually we have very limited dependence on US products because they all can be replaced, and most of them are not necessitie­s.”

“The US is not irreplacea­ble in many areas, like tourism and education, we have many other options elsewhere,” said a woman surnamed Fan from Shanghai who plans to send her son for studies abroad.

According to an article published in the Washington Post Friday, in a trade war, Trump voters likely get hurt the most, because “tariffs are basically taxes, that means Americans will pay more when they shop.”

“That’s especially true for low-income families who spend a higher share of their paychecks on goods and often buy the cheapest products, families that Trump often thinks of as his base.”

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