South China Morning Post

Beijing ‘prepared for rainy days’ if Trump is re-elected

- Kawala Xie kawala.xie@scmp.com

Beijing was prepared for new turbulence in US-China relations if Donald Trump returned to the White House, a prominent Chinese academic said yesterday.

Speaking at a summit in Hong Kong, Yang Jiemian, chairman of the Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies’ (SIIS) Academic Advisory Council, also said that China should “prepare for the worst” but “do its best” in response to further trade and tech frictions with the US.

It comes amid concerns of a full-blown economic war if Trump is re-elected in November.

Yang said that after dealing with the Joe Biden administra­tion for three years, Beijing knew what was on the table and could push to “translate the San Francisco vision into reality”.

“But … we must calculate and prepare for anything that Trump could do [differentl­y] from his first term,” he said, adding that Beijing was “always prepared for the rainy days”.

Yang was addressing former US officials, business leaders and economists at the first Global Prosperity Summit, co-organised by the SIIS and Hong Kong think tank the Savantas Policy Institute.

The three-day summit got under way as Biden said the US would raise tariffs on US$18 billion worth of Chinese goods, including quadruplin­g the current duties on electric vehicles to 100 per cent.

In response, China’s commerce ministry said Beijing would take “resolute measures to safeguard its interests”.

Biden and his counterpar­t Xi Jinping agreed to manage tensions when they met in San Francisco in November, but the US has continued to impose technology and trade restrictio­ns against China that it says are necessary because of national security concerns and Chinese military ambitions.

Trump, the presumptiv­e Republican nominee set to take on Biden in the November 5 presidenti­al election, has also threatened to impose 60 per cent tariffs on all Chinese imports if he is re-elected.

Yang told reporters on the sidelines of the summit that “the US suppressio­n … always unfolds gradually”.

“We have also responded to it step by step,” he said. “Compared with six years ago, China is more confident and better prepared.”

Susan Thornton, former assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs under Trump, said during a panel discussion that both Biden and Trump were expected to take tougher measures on China.

She said Biden had mostly continued Trump’s economic policy on China, but Trump would be more unpredicta­ble if he secured a second term.

“The Biden administra­tion is still very intent on managing the relationsh­ip and having it be stabilised and predictabl­e,” Thornton said. “We don’t know what we’ll see from the Trump administra­tion … how Trump would approach allies in Asia … and also the question of Taiwan and how that would be managed.”

Trump’s former ambassador to the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe, James Gilmore, said earlier this month that Trump would be “supportive” of Taiwan if he was re-elected as the island had become a dangerous flash point in US-China relations.

At another panel discussion yesterday, Kurt Tong, former US consul general to Hong Kong and Macau, said Washington’s “small yard, high fence” policy on China was getting “bigger” with “a lot of holes”.

“If you’re going to have the technology denial policy, is that clearly defined?” he said.

“If you’re suspecting the other side of making every item on the planet into a weapon, then there will be no more trade. Right? So we do need to figure out the difference between goods which can and should be traded or invested freely, and others that can be protected for national security purposes.”

Huang Ping, director of the Centre for Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told reporters on the sidelines of the summit that the US “should not use national security challenges as an excuse to restrict China’s scientific and technologi­cal developmen­t”.

Hong Kong has a special role to play in stabilisin­g the China-US relationsh­ip, but it must also step up its game in rebuilding bridges with the rest of the world, according to analysts.

They made the call at the inaugural Global Prosperity Summit yesterday, spearheade­d by Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee, convenor of the government’s key decisionma­king Executive Council.

The gathering is aimed at facilitati­ng greater exchanges between Hong Kong and the rest of the world and clearing up misunderst­andings about the country.

“Hong Kong can play a big role [in the China-US relationsh­ip]. We are an internatio­nal cosmopolit­an [city]. We are well-connected. We understand the culture and political systems of both mainland [China] and the West,” Ip said.

“We are well-positioned to really maximise our role as a superconne­ctor and an intermedia­ry between the mainland and the world.”

Ip’s comments echoed panellist Professor Huang Ping, director of the Centre for Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

He described Hong Kong as not only unique within the country but also the world.

He attributed the quality to the fact Hong Kong practised a capitalist system on Chinese soil, allowing it to be part of the Western economy.

“We don’t have such a place anywhere else. So Hong Kong will bridge, not only the US and China, [but also] China with the rest of the world,” he said.

Hong Kong could help address problems commonly faced by China and the United States and even ease confrontat­ions between the two superpower­s in areas such as climate change, artificial intelligen­ce and global health, the scholar added.

Panellist Kurt Tong, who served as the top US diplomat in Hong Kong from 2016 to 2019, said US-China relations were currently stable even though engagement between the city and Washington at both official and private levels had suffered over the past five years.

“It’s a better environmen­t for Hong Kong to make use of the agency that it has, bring its autonomy at full play, organise its messaging and decide what it wants to do as a superconne­ctor,” Tong, now a partner at Washington­based business advisory firm The Asia Group, told the panel.

The Hong Kong government should create more opportunit­ies for regular residents to visit the US for the purpose of establishi­ng connection­s with Americans, he said.

“Reach out and rebuild the bridges. Make [the connection between Hongkonger­s and Americans] reinforced and even stronger. I think that will be good for the city and for the US-China relationsh­ip,” he added.

All three speakers agreed that greater engagement was needed not just at the people-to-people level but also among non-government­al organisati­ons to help Sino-US ties improve.

Tong added a change from merely informatio­n-sharing to “outcomes-oriented negotiatio­ns” in bilateral talks would further help ties.

 ?? Photo: Elson Li ?? Yang Jiemian says China should “prepare for the worst” but “do its best” in response to further frictions with the US.
Photo: Elson Li Yang Jiemian says China should “prepare for the worst” but “do its best” in response to further frictions with the US.
 ?? Photo: Elson Li ?? Regina Ip, seen with Huang Ping and Kurt Tong, says Hong Kong is in a good position to maximise its role as a superconne­ctor.
Photo: Elson Li Regina Ip, seen with Huang Ping and Kurt Tong, says Hong Kong is in a good position to maximise its role as a superconne­ctor.

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