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Tariffs: How Did We Get Here?


By James Stuber,Author & Founder, MadeInAmericaAgain.org-Contributor, The American Dossier


How did it come to this? The breakdown of trade talks and imposition of new tariffs on Chinese goods has refocused attention on the U.S.-China economic relationship. In a previous column, I recounted the lost jobs and social damage resulting from that one-sided relationship, in which the Chinese annually sell some $420 billion more products to the U.S. than they buy.



It wasn’t supposed to work out this way. China was supposed to play fair under the international trading system, and, over time, become a market-based, free economy. The opposite has happened: state-owned enterprises, state subsidies to “private” enterprises, state-sponsored technology theft and protectionism still hold sway, and Chinese and even Western joint venture companies are being required to place Chinese Communist Party officials on their boards.


And China was supposed to become more democratic as its middle class grew. Instead, the Chinese Communist Party has become more entrenched, and Xi Jinping has consolidated power not seen since Mao Zedong.


Why did those rosy predictions fail? We must recognize that our economic relationship with China is part of something much bigger: China endured the “Great Humiliation” at the hands of the Western powers and Japan for a century from the 1840s through World War II. To appreciate its indelible mark on the Chinese psyche, imagine the Chinese taking over the U.S. port cities of New York, Charleston, Houston, and Los Angeles, and Chinese gunships plying the Mississippi river.


Now, China has embarked on what its leader Xi Jinping calls the “Great Rejuvenation,” aimed at achieving Chinese global economic, technological, and military preeminence, as spelled out in the “China 2025” and “China 2049” plans. In pursuit of those goals China is practicing --


  • Economic imperialism, through China’s “Belt and Road” initiative, in which it lends money to countries to build infrastructure to carry Chinese products to the rest of the word; outright purchase of Western companies; and, perhaps most insidiously as my colleague Roger Robinson has pointed out, selling stock in Chinese companies in the U.S. over-the-counter stock markets, co-opting U.S. shareholders into supporting Chinese economic goals;

  • Cultural Imperialism, by establishing and funding Chinese “institutes” at Western universities, and placing propaganda ads in the Wall Street Journal that read like news stories;

  • Military Imperialism, through an enormous buildup of naval, air, and land forces, and laying claim to the entire South China Sea with the support of militarized man-made islands.


So, we must ask, what does it look like when China is in charge of the world? We receive more than a hint by looking inside China, where a million Uighurs of the Xinjiang region have been placed in indoctrination camps, and Mao’s Little Red Book has been replaced by a phone app that keeps track of how often people are reading Xi Jinping’s words.


In short, we can look forward to technology-enabled totalitarianism with one goal – keeping the Chinese Communist Party in Power.


It’s time to step off the road to that future; tariffs are a first step.

 

Jim has founded a non-profit organization called Made in America

Again. Their mission is to create awareness and build healthy American communities

through consumers buying things made in those communities.


His specific goal for MIAA is to bring home $500 billion in consumer spending, enough

to balance trade, create six million jobs, take the slack out of the economy, and get a

virtuous circle going again. 

Jim has kindly agreed to share his insights from time to time.



For more information on Stuber’s research, visit www.madeinamericaagain.org

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