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CNN: Why the US would never win a trade war with China

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Why the US would never win a trade war with China
By Kristina Hooper for CNN Business Perspectives

Updated 10:22 AM ET, Thu January 3, 2019

Over the last several decades, lower tariffs and relaxed trade barriers strengthened global supply chains and fueled a major increase in global trade.

In fact, the average rate of tariffs on imports by World Trade Organization members declined from slightly more than 12.74% in 1996 to 8.8% in 2016. Global trade went from $5 trillion in 1996 to $19 trillion in 2013.

We are now moving backward. In its efforts to achieve what it believes to be fair trade, the United States has started trade disputes with several different economies.

Its conflict with China is by far the most intense, resulting in a series of additional tariffs. Some people believe that because America is the net buyer and China is the net seller in their trade relationship, China will lose the trade war and ultimately surrender. I believe that's wrong.

Tariffs will hurt both countries. Many tariffed products can't easily be substituted, so they will continue to be purchased — just at higher prices. When a tariff is applied to a particular good, one of three things can happen.

Profits suffer
In some industries, companies will be unwilling or unable to pass the cost onto its customers. This means the company's profits are reduced. For public companies, this of course hurts earnings — and therefore could also impact stock prices.

At first blush, for instance, one would assume that Alcoa, a US company, would benefit from tariffs on foreign producers of aluminum, but it's not that simple. Alcoa's input costs have risen because it utilizes a significant amount of primary aluminum from Canada, which it smelts to produce its own aluminum. The CEO of Alcoa has eloquently argued that not only do tariffs hurt profitability, they distort the market and make it less efficient "by incentivizing the restart of aged, inefficient capacity" in the United States.


Prices rise
A company may pass the cost of tariffs to its customers (as Apple, for example, has suggested it would do) and consumers pay more for the same item. This means that, all else being equal, they have less money left to spend on other goods or services.
Demand declines

A company may pass the cost of tariffs to its customers, but demand decreases because consumers cut back their purchases. We have already begun seeing "demand destruction" in an industry that was one of the first to experience the imposition of tariffs at the start of 2018: washing machines. The same thing could happen to other items, including other "big ticket" purchases such as cars, if tariffs are applied to them.

Tariffs have other negative effects. They undermine business confidence by increasing policy uncertainty. Tariffs can create inefficiency and lower productivity.

The United States has legitimate issues with China — valid concerns about access to markets and intellectual property violations. However, it should pursue them with the World Trade Organization, not through tariffs. Using tariffs only opens it up to retaliation from China. And China has a large arsenal of weapons, beyond tariffs, that it can use against the United States. Following are just a few of these potential weapons.



    • Counter the drop in foreign purchases of Chinese goods through increased domestic spending (which China is currently doing). The US executive branch cannot execute similar stimulus without a spending bill approved by Congress.
    • Depreciate the yuan to lower the price of Chinese goods to American buyers in order to counter the impact of tariffs.
    • Stop the purchase of treasuries and/or sell existing holdings of treasuries, at a time when the US government is issuing more debt and the Federal Reserve is normalizing its balance sheet by selling US debt. The net effect would be an increase in borrowing costs for the US government, all else being equal.
    • Create closer trading relationships with other countries to isolate and exclude the United States (for example, China cut auto tariffs for US allies).
    • Encourage North Korea to antagonize the United States, given that improved relations with North Korea has been an important goal of President Donald Trump's.
    • Execute a regulatory crackdown on American companies (environmental or anti-monopoly investigations, for example).
    • Place an embargo on the sale of rare earth metals to American companies and the US government (this is a necessary material for many smart phones and US missile defense systems).
The good news is that the two countries have agreed to a temporary cease fire in their trade battles. But it's not at all clear whether they will be able to work out a resolution.

The bottom line is that, given President Xi's status as president for life, China can play a long game. President Trump has a reelection campaign to worry about in less than two years. I assume that Xi will attempt to ride out the current conflict without making any significant concessions and that the United States, once its economy is damaged enough, is likely to ultimately capitulate.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/03/perspectives/us-china-trade-war/index.html
 
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Editor's note: Kristina Hooper is chief global market strategist at Invesco. The opinions expressed in this commentary are her own.

Anyone actually looked at how invesco is doing lately? Of course their "strategists" would spew this very rudimentary cursory talking points stuff (no actual deep analysis presented)...they have no other choice tbh.
 
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Editor's note: Kristina Hooper is chief global market strategist at Invesco. The opinions expressed in this commentary are her own.

Anyone actually looked at how invesco is doing lately? Of course their "strategists" would spew this very rudimentary cursory talking points stuff (no actual deep analysis presented)...they have no other choice tbh.
Every article expresses the author's own opinions, what surprised you?
 
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Every article expresses the author's own opinions, what surprised you?

Just wondering if anyone actually knows what Invesco does and their underlying performance (and thus bias on the issue). But carry on if you don't.
 
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They already did, didn't they, check the growth record in the past 40 years.

Closed economy = zero exports.

That is the goal of these zionists to cripple all trade with China. China better have many plans and options, nearly all including a closed economic option.
 
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Closed economy = zero exports.

That is the goal of these zionists to cripple all trade with China. China better have many plans and options, nearly all including a closed economic option.
Don't worry, they can't afford it, they need China more than China needs them.
 
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You see 40 years ago, the zionist thought Chinese would be factory slaves of the Western zionists, all making poor mans wage and China would be a colony of the capitalists and obedient to the Washington slavers.

40 years later and China can stand up to the bully of the world - Amerika. This scares the bully so the bully wants China destroyed and everything made in Vietnam, Taiwan and Thailand instead of made in China.

Even with China obeying the rules and listening to Western politicians to abandon North Korea and not buy gold and sanction Iran and sanction everyone China is friends with and go along with the globalists' game, China was still betrayed by the zionists. The zionists will blame trump and and only the neo-nazis, but the neo-nazis are zionists. It is ''good' cop' and ''bad' cop' of the zionists. China liked dealing with the ''good' cop' of the globalists like the Clintons, but is being attacked by the ''bad' cop' of trump and neo-nazis. But Clinton and trump are all friends and allies and obedient slaves of the jewish zionists. If the Amerikans chose Clinton, all the attacks would have been at Russia, now that trump is in office, the zionist nightmare of destroying China is pushed to the front. They are all on the same zionist team, they all serve Israhell and jewish interests.

Putin's ''good' cop' of trump is the ''bad' cop' of China. China's ''good' 'cop' of hillary is the ''bad' cop' of Russia. This is how the zionists work. And Russia is like the zionist Democratic party owned and run by the zionists, and Amerika is like the Republican party own and run by zionists.

This is how jews operate.
 
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The Americans were not ready for war until 30 years later. Hopefully China never falls to the zionists.

What is great about Chinese communism is it serves the Chinese people, not jews.
 
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40 years ago, China was poor and backward. Now the most powerful country in the world regards China as a competitor, which may be an honor for China:coffee:
 
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Trump's trade war with China is shooting himself in the foot, a trade war may hurt China a bit but it will hurt US much worse, especially in the long term, it helps China to optimize her economic structure while US gets nothing.
 
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Closed economy = zero exports.

That is the goal of these zionists to cripple all trade with China. China better have many plans and options, nearly all including a closed economic option.
Most China export are essential goods and not luxury items. The price and technology cannot be replicated in short terms in another third world countries. Stop China import will equally hurt themselves.
 
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Awwww....a 'gora' who doesn't support your view of collapsing China. Ouchhh...

No "gora" can ever be bought and paid for? Do you even know what Invesco is?....mr "imma call gary to listen if hes really chinese...and get my *** handed to me"
 
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