Weekly Opinion Editorial
CHINA IS NOT
OUR FRIEND!
by Steve Fair
President Trump met with Chinese President
Xi at the G20 meeting in Argentina last
week. They agreed to put their trade war
on hold for 90 days. Additional tariffs
on goods were scheduled to increase on January 1st. Those increases appear to be still under negotiation.
Trump had increased the tariffs on Chinese
imports from 10 to 25%. That had
impacted $250 billion of goods imported from China. In retaliation, China did the same thing on
$110 billion of U.S. exports. Many
economists feared the trade war would stall the world economy and urged the two
leaders to work out a solution.
The president tweeted on Monday: “My
meeting in Argentina with President Xi of China was an extraordinary one.
Relations with China have taken a BIG leap forward! Very good things will
happen. We are dealing from great strength, but China likewise has much to gain
if and when a deal is completed. Level the field!”
Immediately liberals jumped on the POTUS
for using the phase, ‘leap forward,’ because China had a program from 1958-1962
called the Great Leap Forward. The
campaign was led by Chairman Mao Zedong and aimed to move the country from an agriculture
economy to industrialization. It was
widely considered to have caused the Chinese Famine. It’s a stretch to believe Trump was endorsing
a famine, but liberals seize every opportunity to criticize.
The
White House released the following statement on the agreement: "President
Trump has agreed that on January 1, 2019, he will leave the tariffs on $200
billion worth of product at the 10 percent rate, and not raise it to 25 percent
at this time," the statement read. Over the next 90 days, American and
Chinese officials will continue to negotiate lingering disagreements on
technology transfer, intellectual property and agriculture. Both parties agree
that they will endeavor to have this transaction completed within the next 90
days. If at the end of this period of time, the parties are unable to reach an
agreement, the 10 percent tariffs will be raised to 25 percent.”
President Trump made trade negotiations one of
his key campaign themes. He promised to
insure America did better at negotiating trade agreements than in the
past. By delaying the full
implementation of the increased tariffs, did the president ‘blink’ as some
critics claim? Two observations:
First, America needs to level the economic
playing field. For decades, our trade
agreements have benefited other countries and cost American taxpayers
billions. From paying for infrastructure
to providing start-up capital in developing countries to selling agriculture
products at lower prices, America’s negotiators gave away more than the farm
every time they sat at the table.
Second, Trump must be cautious when
dealing with the communists. Their
values are not our values. Their
worldview is not ours. China and Russia
are not our friends. They don’t like
each other much, but they like America less.
A U.S. President must always remember that- whether negotiating a trade
or arms agreement.
In 2007, the US economy was four times the size
of China- in 2011, only twice the size.
At their continue growth rate, China’s economy will overtake America in
2029. Americans better hope President
Trump is as good of negotiator as he claims.
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