Opinion | Xi Is Making the World Pay for Chinas Economic Blunders
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President Trump’s readiness to use coercive tariffs presents a profound threat to the postwar economic and political order, introducing an unpredictability to global commerce that makes it difficult for trade partners to know how to react — and next to impossible for businesses to plan.But he is not the only danger the world economy faces and may not even be the biggest.That may be President Xi Jinping of China, whose more strategic and calibrated industrial and economic policies are fundamentally distorting and harming global trade.Trade usually refers to the combination of imports and exports.
But Mr.Xi has upended that idea, radically changing China’s trade interaction with the rest of the world, at least when it comes to manufactured goods.
Over the past six years, China’s imports of such goods increased by an average of only $15 billion a year, essentially no change at all when inflation is taken into account.Its manufactured exports, on the other hand, have grown more than 10 times as fast, by over $150 billion a year.
When it comes to manufactured goods, trade with China is virtually a one-way street.China now dominates global manufacturing, and its trade surplus dwarfs the biggest run by Germany and Japan during their eras of postwar export supremacy.Countries around the world get cheap Chinese products, but they can’t sell nearly as many of their own to China.
Their export sectors are hurting — see Germany — and not hiring.Why is Mr.Xi doing this? To make up for the Chinese government’s mismanagement of its domestic economy.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
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