First, consider the evidence for the break.
The current impasse in trade talks was sparked by a sudden change in terms on the part of the Chinese negotiators.
This change likely caught the administration off guard, but Trump’s response is notable: He immediately ramped up tariffs, then announced a ban on business with Chinese telecommunications firm and national champion Huawei Technologies Co.
These actions have backed Chinese President Xi Jinping into a corner and turned the trade dispute into a matter of Chinese national pride.
This limits the possibility not only of a quick resolution, but also of the chances that the Chinese people will accept any concessions to the US.
Trump’s handling of this situation stands in sharp contrast to his negotiating strategy on other issues.
Though the president railed against NAFTA throughout his campaign, he’s touted its replacement as a huge success, even though it is only cosmetically different, and has been willing to suspend his tariffs on Canada and Mexico to ease its passage through Congress.
Likewise, Trump has been more than willing to trumpet his successful negotiations with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un even though the evidence for such success is thin.
Meanwhile, the president’s tough talk against Europe and Japan for their trade practices, and against NATO allies for their defence spending, has been mostly bluster.
When it comes to China, however, the president is doubling down.
He has encouraged US supply chains to move out of China and established subsidy programmes to cushion farmers from the effects of a protracted trade war.
Which leads to the long-term implications of this battle. A protracted trade war would almost guarantee a global realignment.
Supply chains that run through both the US and China would constantly be subject to disruptions, so global manufacturers would have to decide whether to pursue an America-centric or China-centric strategy.
That’s already the case in the digital sphere, where Chinese restrictions on the Internet divide the world into two parts: that which is served by US tech giants such as Google and Facebook, and that which relies on Chinese firms such as Baidu and WeChat.
China’s threat to cut off US access to rare-earth minerals points to a potential bifurcation in commodities markets as well.
The trend is clear: As China’s economic and geopolitical power grows, countries within China’s sphere of influence will feel increasing pressure to integrate their economies with Chinese supply chains and multinationals rather than American ones.
At the same time, as my Bloomberg Opinion colleague Tyler Cowen points out, the rise of China is a main driver of populist sentiment in the UK and Australia.
This creates political pressure in those countries for further isolation from China.
In the US, Trump has made it clear that he sees the trade war with China as politically advantageous for him, and he’s probably right.
It’s probably also true that this anti-China sentiment will outlast him.
Break in global order
Add up all these factors, and the US-China trade war looks like the beginning of a profound break in the global order. As China and the US form two opposing economic and geopolitical coalitions, the rest of the world will be forced to choose.
Maybe the European Union can form a third unaligned pole, as France and Germany’s membership in the EU (and the UK’s absence from it) provides them with the negotiating power to avoid falling under the Chinese or American sphere of influence.
Of course, in some ways this type of multipolar alignment would be a return to the past. The dual-superpower world that existed for much of the second half of the 20th century was always an exception, and the era of American supremacy that began after the collapse of the Soviet Union was never going to last.
Until recently, however, a new kind of bipolar arrangement seemed possible: a kind of competitive partnership between China and the US, with the EU playing a supporting role.
The events of the last few weeks have left that looking increasingly unlikely. — Bloomberg Opinion
By Karl W. Smith , a former assistant professor of economics at the University of North Carolina’s school of government.
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Read more :
The Tech Cold War Has Begun - Bloomberg
China now has no choice but to pursue technological independence, and will burn the cash to achieve it.
... A similar process took place when ZTE Corp. was banned from buying
U.S. products after reneging on a deal to settle charges of breaking
trade sanctions. ... The U.S. ended up
Another Long March begins
Chinese
President Xi Jinping said that "we are on a new Long March now" during
his inspection tour of Jiangxi Province this week and encouraged people
to gain strength from the spirit of the Long March to overcome
difficulties and obstacles, China's state media outlets reported on
Thursday.
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