China Daily

Politician­s ‘ignoring trade war fallout’

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SAN FRANCISCO — The damaging ripples of a trade war between the United States and China could spill beyond the economy, but Washington politician­s, who overstate trade problems, tend to ignore that, a California-based expert said on Monday.

“Trade is important for maintainin­g peace between countries. When you have less trade, it raises the chances of conflicts,” John Graham, professor emeritus of internatio­nal business at the University of California, Irvine, said.

At the Boao Forum for Asia conference in China’s Hainan earlier this month, Chinese President Xi Jinping said prosperity and peace are related.

“Trade brings prosperity and peace. That’s a hugely important concept. We know it’s true and verified empiricall­y,” Graham said.

However, the current leadership in Washington tends to ignore the relationsh­ip between trade and peace. That’s a very big mistake and dangerous to the world, he said.

In his keynote speech on April 10, Xi said China will launch a number of landmark measures this year to significan­tly broaden its market access. It will also try to achieve faster progress in joining the World Trade Organizati­on Agreement on Government Procuremen­t.

“The key to human progress since World War II has been opening up markets all around the world. President Xi talked about supporting the WTO and opening up market, which will be good to everybody on the planet,” Graham said.

Though the opening-up may mean some US workers will lose jobs, Graham said internatio­nal trade benefits the average US citizens. The problem most countries have is the disparity between high-income and lowincome workers. Trade has nothing to do with it but domestic policies do, he said.

“Domestic policies make that happen in all the countries, particular­ly here. The tax policy and anti-union policy are helping exacerbate the divide of incomes across Americans,” he said.

Graham said politician­s in Washington almost always overstate trade problems when they focus on merchandis­e trade deficit.

The US continues to sell about $20 billion more in services to Chinese customers than China does to the US, with tourism and education being prominent examples, he said.

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