Kuwait Times

Trump, Xi and trade: A high-stakes game of chicken

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SHANGHAI, CHINA: What happens when the planet’s two biggest economies play a high-stakes game of chicken? The world may be about to find out, with President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping both holding favorable enough economic hands to make it hard to predict who blinks first, analysts said. Hope for an imminent resolution of the China-US trade dispute dimmed after Trump vowed to further raise import tariffs this week to punish China for what he framed as bad-faith negotiatin­g, rocking world markets. Here are some of the key questions regarding the impasse.

Why has Trump turned the screws now? That remains unclear but the president has been known to tout strong US economic data or Wall Street gains as evidence that he is “winning” the trade war and as leverage against China. Recent developmen­ts will have given him ample reason to up the ante. April data indicated vigorous American job growth, a fresh sign of US economic strength that has helped propel the S&P 500 and

Nasdaq stock indices to record highs this month. Last month figures showed the world’s top economy grew at a faster pace than expected in the first quarter.

How will China react? Beijing’s shrewd communist leaders have been negotiatin­g favorable economic arrangemen­ts with the world for decades, and few observers would bet on them suddenly capitulati­ng. Whatever Xi does, he also has reason to hold firm. The world’s secondlarg­est economy is decelerati­ng from its era of hyper-growth, but it expanded by a betterthan-forecast 6.4 percent in January-March, a sign of stability despite the trade turbulence.

And Chinese stock markets-among the world’s worst in 2018 — are up significan­tly this year after Beijing pulled an array of policy and monetary levers to keep the economy chugging. “Both sides have reason to be confident and ask for more,” said Bao Ting, strategist with Great Wall Securities. “It’s not surprising for negotiatio­ns to go back and forth in the final stages” as the two sides drill down on nitty-gritty details, she added.

So whose hand is stronger? Probably Trump’s, analysts say, because Xi faces a challenge maintainin­g the economic growth on which the government stakes its ruling legitimacy, while also implementi­ng tricky reform of inefficien­t state industries. Of particular concern is a fresh spike in debt this year as Chinese authoritie­s have relied heavily on eased credit restrictio­ns to juice the economy while they battle Trump’s trade pressure.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has previously called China’s debt addiction “dangerous”. “This massive credit stimulus has stabilized China’s economy for now but the impact is unlikely to be long-lasting or without complicati­on,” said Brock Silvers, managing director of Kaiyuan Capital in Shanghai. “China could soon regret a missed chance to end to what looks to be a worsening and increasing­ly risky trade war.”

But China has for years used a flood of credit and targeted pump-priming to keep its economic miracle going, and today stands taller than ever. “That gives China a lot of strength. They have many different ways of keep things churning,” said Christophe­r Balding, an expert on China’s economy at Fulbright University in Ho Chi Minh City. —AFP

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: People walk past the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in the Financial District on Monday morning on Monday in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped over 360 points at the open on Monday morning after US President Donald Trump said that the US will raise tariffs on goods imported from China. —AFP
NEW YORK: People walk past the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in the Financial District on Monday morning on Monday in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped over 360 points at the open on Monday morning after US President Donald Trump said that the US will raise tariffs on goods imported from China. —AFP

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