US-China trade war could end with a ‘big deal’ through baby steps towards mutual understanding
Robert Lawrence Kuhn says the US must accept China’s need to support technological development, while China should work with US policymakers who oppose tariffs but want the country to further open its markets and protect intellectual property rights
Let me offer some critical balance and call out misunderstandings on both sides. Regarding US confusions, for Trump, the conflict has always been about US trade deficits with China, about US$375 billion in 2017. But a country’s exports and imports are not like, say, a real estate company’s revenues and expenses. Trade balances are complex. Some Chinese products are produced by foreign-owned companies in China, including American companies, which capture profits from goods counted as Chinese exports.
The trade deficit includes the cost of intermediary products, like displays and chips for iPhones, which are produced in other countries; the Chinese assembly cost constitutes only a small fraction of the full cost attributable to the trade deficit.