The U.S.-China Trade War and Policy Resilience

Author:

Ashbee Edward1,Hurst Steven2

Affiliation:

1. Professor MSO, Department of International Economics, Government and Business, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark

2. Reader in Politics, Department of History, Politics and Philosophy, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK

Abstract

Abstract One can attribute the Trump administration’s pursuit of a trade war against the People’s Republic of China (prc) to a range of variables, including its re-election hopes, commitment to protectionism as an economic weapon, fears about Beijing’s pursuit of artificial intelligence, and broader strategic concerns about the global balance of power. This article argues that another explanation for President Donald J. Trump’s ability to change trade policy towards China was the structural weaknesses of the trade policy regime that emerged at the end of the 1990s when Congress adopted Permanent Normal Trade Relations as a designation for free trade in July 1998 and the prc joined the World Trade Organization in December 2001. Those weaknesses owed much to the ways in which the United States initially framed the new trade regime with the prc and the limited, only partially conclusive, character of the debate that took place at the time. Despite the growth and embedding of supply chains between China and the United States, these inbuilt weaknesses contributed to the progressive erosion of the trade policy regime during the years that followed. Within this context, few constituencies were ready to lobby for the prc after January 2017 and the Trump administration faced little opposition to its change of trade policy.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies

Reference90 articles.

1. Clinton, William J. “Full Text of Clinton’s Speech on China Trade Bill,” 9 March 2000, New York Times, https://www.iatp.org/sites/default/files/Full_Text_of_Clintons_Speech_on_China_Trade_Bi.htm.

2. Congressional-Executive Commission on China. “2016 Annual Report,” 6 October 2016, https://china.usc.edu/congressional-executive-commission-china-2016-annual-report-oct-6-2016.

3. Congressional-Executive Commission on China. About. Washington, DC: Congressional-Executive Commission on China, 2018, https://www.cecc.gov/about.

4. Congressional Research Service. “Made in China 2025.” Industrial Policies: Issues for Congress, 11 August 2020, https://fas.org/sgp/crs/row/IF10964.pdf.

5. Office of Hillary Rodham Clinton. “Hillary on the Issues: Manufacturing.” https://www.hillaryclinton.com/issues/manufacturing/.

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