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The US will bear the brunt of any try by president-elect Donald Trump to decouple economically from China, a senior Beijing adviser has warned, citing the reliance on low-cost Chinese language components of American producers together with the defence business.
Trump’s plan to lift tariffs by 60 per cent would halve US GDP development and Chinese language suppliers would search to evade the levies by rerouting merchandise by different international locations, mentioned Ding Yifan, a researcher at a think-tank affiliated with China’s cupboard, the State Council.
The blunt warning from an influential authorities adviser was among the many clearest indicators but of Chinese language concern about Trump’s tariff threats and the prospect of escalating trade tensions between the 2 international locations.
“If these navy enterprises would not have provide from China, they will be unable to proceed with their manufacturing,” Ding, an knowledgeable on the State Council’s Improvement Analysis Middle, advised a government-promoted briefing for worldwide media.
“If [US leaders] actually implement the insurance policies for commerce friction or a confrontation, it should have extreme penalties,” Ding mentioned.
Beijing leaders have to this point largely been restrained in feedback on Trump’s victory, though Chinese language President Xi Jinping warned US counterpart Joe Biden on the Apec summit in Peru on the weekend that Washington shouldn’t overstep Beijing’s “crimson traces”.
These traces included China’s proper to financial growth — a reference to US restrictions on high-technology exports to China. However Xi mentioned he would work with Trump and whereas he pushed again on commerce restrictions, the tone of the assembly was constructive.
Chinese language officers had been fiercely outspoken throughout Trump’s first time period, in an method that grew to become generally known as “Wolf Warrior” diplomacy, however analysts consider this time Beijing is taking a wait-and-see method till the president-elect’s new administration comes into workplace.
As proof of US reliance on Chinese language producers, Ding cited feedback at a convention in September the place Greg Hayes, chief government of RTX, previously Raytheon, mentioned the US aerospace and weapons group had 2,000 suppliers in China.
Hayes advised the Monetary Instances final yr that western corporations may “de-risk but not decouple” from China and that it could take them a few years to search out different suppliers.
With its economic system affected by a protracted property downturn, China wants export markets to soak up manufacturing from its factories, that are affected by weak home demand.
Ding was accompanied on the briefing on Monday by two different government-affiliated consultants, together with Wu Sa, an adviser from a think-tank underneath China’s highly effective planning physique, the Nationwide Improvement and Reform Fee.
Ding portrayed Trump’s efforts to extend tariffs as extra of a risk to the US economic system than to China’s. The US not solely imported completed shopper items from China, but in addition a big portion of intermediate merchandise that had been integrated by American factories into their items, he mentioned.
“Downstream American corporations will be unable to search out substitute merchandise in a really quick time frame if Chinese language corporations usually are not in a position to present them with the merchandise,” Ding mentioned. “Because of this, there can be better chaos in American economic system.”
He additionally cited US research as saying American shoppers paid for the majority of the price of the earlier spherical of tariffs. The Peterson Institute for Worldwide Economics has warned shoppers often foot the invoice for such measures.
“In the event that they double the tariff, Chinese language enterprises have their very own methods to evade this, to keep away from the dangers. We are able to switch our commerce to different international locations,” he mentioned. “However the final market wouldn’t change, it could not [reduce] the commerce deficit of the US and that is solely an phantasm of the Trump administration.”
Whereas Ding claimed the impression on China could be “marginal”, economists have warned that the nation’s GDP would additionally take a sizeable hit from 60 per cent tariffs.
Yang Zhou, an economist at Shanghai’s Fudan College, estimated in a paper final yr that the early years of the commerce conflict, which began in 2018, value China 0.29 per cent of GDP in mixture actual earnings in opposition to 0.08 per cent of GDP for the US.