Originally posted by iam416
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The article below describes the various D presidential candidate's positions on China Trade. Some, if elected US president, will make it easier for China to obtain it's trade objectives, some won't.
My view is that the current (and past) US administrations have, more or less, thrown their hands up in exasperation with the WTO as a means of curtailing what most trade experts believe is China's blatantly unfair trade practices. The Trump administration has taken the unusual step of actually neutering the WTOs' dispute resolution arm forcing the world's trading nations to find other ways of resolving trade disputes using arbitrators. It's an interesting anvil upon which to keep hammering the Chinese. I support it.
This article below casts a question mark on the viability of what some think is Xi's "wait it out" strategy with Trump. The central theme suggesting it's harder for China to deal with the status-quo anti of the May blow-up of a trade deal than it is for the US is this. The risk to China of continuing the status-quo-anti, which will likely precipitate large international corporations either not expanding investments in China or withdrawing from China markets altogether is real. It's estimated this issue is already costing China one-trillion dollars in trade inflow.
As well, if Trump is re-elected because voters reject the D's preference for socialist policies in the US, a very real possibility at this point, where does this leave Xi? He doesn't want to be there. These two potential realities are likely to be driving Xi's position and that of his trade negotiators going forward. While, as I have said, I don't seen any major concessions on either side coming out of Shanghai this week, the author of the linked article thinks that if China wants respect from the US, something it has been demanding of late, it needs to show respect by doing what global trading partners have long expected them to do: make their markets more open to global traders.
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