Mainland China, G7 responses to Taiwan escalation would harm all parties, research finds
- A research report has determined mainland China, G7 countries could do severe economic harm to each other in the event of escalation over Taiwan
- Sanctions similar to those levied against Russia would be damaging, but export-import restrictions in response would also bring global economy to halt
![A study has found G7 sanctions and mainland China’s response to a hypothetical escalation in cross-strait tensions would be devastating to the global economy. Photo: Handout](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2024/04/02/e410e429-5456-452d-8de8-bd08225bd53d_b0e4f74c.jpg?itok=83Wcci29&v=1712020432)
But analysts cautioned that despite that defensive capacity, the mainland’s economy may be too weak to shrug off sanctions of the type placed on Russia, while a Taiwanese business scion called the all-important tech sector on both sides conflict-proof.
If the G7 – the Group of 7, a bloc of seven advanced economies – enacts sanctions against China, Beijing can restrict exports of “critical goods” and the activity of foreign investors, the Atlantic Council think tank said in an April 2 report co-authored with research provider Rhodium Group.
“While still extremely costly in economic terms, these tools are nonetheless likely to be considered in a crisis since the costs of war are far higher,” said the report, titled “Retaliation and Resistance”.
“Just as theories of nuclear deterrence account for the concept of second-strike capabilities, so too must we consider economic retaliatory measures in assessing the deterrence character of sanctions.”
Cross-strait ties have declined since August 2022, when former US House speaker Nancy Pelosi paid a visit to Taiwan in defiance of Beijing’s warnings. The mainland responded with a week of military drills around the island.
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