A warning shot before the war


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A warning shot before the war
Yesterday, President Trump signed a memorandum calling for at least $50 billion in tariffs on a wide range of Chinese products, with the full list of targeted imports to be announced by the U.S. Trade Representative within 15 days.
China has yet to announce direct countermeasures for these tariffs, though Chinaโs Ministry of Commerce announced $3 billion in tariffs today in retaliation for American steel and aluminum tariffs announced three weeks ago that went into effect today, and the Wall Street Journal aptly described (paywall) this retaliation as a โwarning shotโ to Trump.
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The $3 billion will include a โ15% tariffs on imports including fruit, nuts, wine and seamless steel pipes,โ while a โsecond round of tariffs of 25% on pork and recycled aluminum would be imposed after further evaluating the U.S. penalties on Chinese exports.โ
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The response is tentative: The Ministry of Commerce โdidnโt give a specific time for imposing the tariffs on U.S. goods and said that Chinese companies have until the end of the month to make comments.โ
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It is also proportional โ โroughly equivalent to the $2.79 billion worth of steel and aluminum that China exported to the United States last year, according to Commerce Department data,โ the New York Times says (paywall).
So whatโs next?
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China undoubtedly has โan equally specific, but longerโ list of products imported from the U.S. that it can tax in retaliation for the $50 billion in tariffs, if and when they take effect, Arthur Kroeber, research head and co-founder of Gavekal Dragonomics, told SCMP.
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Soybeans, sorghum, airplanes, and telecoms equipment are likely at the top of that list, according to Bloomberg. The two farming exports are produced in rural states that are important pieces of Trumpโs political base, while Boeing and Cisco Systems, leading manufacturers of the other two items, respectively, saw their stocks drop 5 percent and 2.8 percent today.
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Bill Bishop writes that โit’s possible that during the 45-day period the U.S. and China could reach agreement on broader concessions that may forestall a broader trade war, at least in the near-term,โ as Liu He, who became a vice premier overseeing financial and industrial policy this week, had given U.S. officials a list of areas that China was willing to compromise on when he visited Washington at the beginning of this month.
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But โwe are not interested in dialogue. We are only interested in actions,โ a senior U.S. official insisted to SCMP. โThe point here is the change of behavior.โ
What is the change in Chinese behavior that the U.S. is trying to achieve? Trump himself has an unshakable obsession with the bottom line of the trade deficit total โ former Trump White House chief of staff Reince Priebus described him as โlike a dog with a bone on this trade issueโ who wonโt back down until the deficit decreases substantially โ but that is not what is making these tariffs so widely supported by Trumpโs advisors. There appear to be three main issues:
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Limited market access, which Trump wants to address by applying โreciprocalโ tariffs.
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Theft of intellectual property, which the USTR estimated costs the U.S. โbetween $225 billion and $600 billion annually.โ
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โUnfairโ industrial policy, by which trade advisor Peter Navarro appears to specifically mean the โMade in China 2025โ initiative, Inkstone News writes.
What are the chances that China will make substantial concessions on any of these points? The New York Times writes (paywall) that โmost experts assume that only collective global action can pressure China to change its trade practices,โ so Trumpโs unilateral โ increasingly synonymous with โAmerica Firstโ โ approach appears rather weak.
Furthermore, Trump seems likely to provoke China on both North Korea and Taiwan, making the likelihood that Beijing is willing to make concessions on trade even smaller. Axios writes that the concurrent dismissal of Rex Tillerson as Secretary of State and replacement of National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster with the provocative hyper-hawk John Bolton could โfundamentally tip the balance of power on Trumpโs national security team.โ Last year, Bolton advocated (WSJ – paywall) for a much closer military relationship with Taiwan, and to โsee how an increasingly belligerent China responds,โ and last month he wrote (WSJ – paywall) about the โLegal case for striking North Korea first.โ
It seems that a war is brewing. Letโs just hope itโs a war of bills, not bullets.
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We really appreciate your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact our whole editorial team at editors@thechinaproject.com. We love feedback!
โLucas Niewenhuis (Jeremy is off until 3/27)
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Chinaโs developing intelligence strategy
How China became a global power of espionage / Axios
Former CIA China analyst Chris Johnson says Chinaโs approach to spying is “looking more and more like the Russiansโฆ. They’re clearly becoming more aggressive,โ he says, adding, “Unlike [the U.S.], they’ll actually devote the resources to it.” -
More on trade
U.S. accuses China of stealing patents in WTO complaint / Reuters
Apple, Google, IBM CEOs head to China with trade war brewing / Bloomberg -
Tracking citizens through technology
Patent filings reflect Chinaโs zeal for facial recognition tech / Financial Times (paywall)
โChinese entities filed for 530 camera and video surveillance patents last year โ more than five times the number applied for in the U.S.,โ as well as more than 900 facial recognition patents, according to research from CB Insights. -
Military might
China’s new stealth fighter uses powerful materials with geometry not found in nature / Popular Science -
South China Sea
U.S. warship sails near disputed islands in South China Sea, officials say / Reuters
โThe operation, which infuriated Beijing, was the latest attempt to counter what Washington sees as Chinaโs efforts to limit freedom of navigation in the strategic waters.โ -
Soft power
Veteran economist takes helm at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences as countryโs top think tank seeks to regain global influence / SCMP
โXie Fuzhan takes charge of research institute that has seen its global ranking drop over the past five years.โ -
Environment
Mekong dam could choke Chinaโs last rainforest / Caixin
โItโs like a haircut that has gone awry in the hands of an absent-minded barber.โ -
Black-market blood
China bungles changes to its blood-donation system / Economist (paywall)
โBlood-sellers made huge profits catering to patients who had counted on getting friends and family to donate for them, but realised they no longer had time to do so before the rules changed.โ -
Cosmetic surgery
โFace loansโ prove Chinaโs unnerving obsession with beauty / Sixth Tone
โThe somewhat grotesque combination of cosmetic surgery and easy-to-access loans shows that the Chinese economy is growing financialized to the point of absurdity.โ -
Changing China
Seeing Chinaโs economic evolution in one familyโs story / PBS Newshour
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Guo Shuqing to lead merged banking and insurance regulator
A highly regarded and efficient financial bureaucrat will lead the new combined banking and insurance regulator, according to Caixin. A key priority for Guo will likely be the crackdown on shadow banking, a major source of risk that is also a key target of Xi Jinpingโs campaign to clean up and consolidate control over the financial sector. -
Huawei in America and Apple in China
The U.S.-China trading relationship is complicated by the leading smartphone companies Huawei and Apple, which regularly get intense scrutiny for their behavior abroad. Fear among Americans regarding data security โ for Appleโs servers in China, and for Huawei phones at home โ is a common factor.
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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An oath, and tears of joy in the Great Hall of the People
To no oneโs surprise, Xi Jinping was elected president for a second term by a unanimous vote at Chinaโs National Peopleโs Congress over the weekend. The atmospherics and accompanying propaganda have emphasized Xiโs extraordinary powers as national leader. -
China appoints new top officials as part of largest-in-years government reshuffle
Among the new top-level officials appointed at the end of Chinaโs annual Two Sessions: Wang Qishan, the trusted adviser of President Xi Jinping, who is a new vice president; Yi Gang, the low-key technocrat who will now lead the Peopleโs Bank of China; and Liu He, the economic mastermind who may wield even more authority than Yi Gang in his role as a vice premier overseeing financial and industrial policy. -
Xi talks tough on Taiwan at close of Chinaโs Two Sessions political gathering
Xi Jinping gave a 40-minute speech at the close of Chinaโs Two Sessions, which hewed closely to well-worn themes of national rejuvenation and achieving the โChina dream.โ Remarks about territorial โreunificationโ stood out and caused anxiety among many observers. -
China gears up to better project its image abroad โ and control its message at home
The Voice of China, a huge new propaganda outlet for China, will aim to โpromote the Party’s theories, line, principles, and policiesโ and โtell good China stories.โ Meanwhile, Chinaโs publicity department has swallowed the countryโs top media regulator, and the covert United Front department is emerging from the shadows, both moves to boost pro-China nationalistic sentiment.
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Shanxi college wants to track studentsโ menstrual cycles to stop truancy from morning exercises
โOne of the worst experiences of being an undergraduate at Chinese universities, at least for me and most of my classmates, is early-morning running,โ writes Jiayun Feng. โWe had to be at the track by 6 a.m., and we tried every possible way to get out of this morning routine. One method was to find a substitute runner to fake our attendance, but that only worked if the teacher did not have a good memory for faces. The classic excuse for the females in our class was: โItโs my day of the month.โโ However, to stop the abuse of such excuses, a university in Shanxi Province recently came up with the idea of tracking every female studentโs menstrual cycle. -
A pro-Xi propaganda banner on model Bella Hadidโs Instagram sends the Chinese internet into confusion
The American model, whose sister Gigi Hadid was denied a Chinese visa last year, visited Shanghai, where she snapped a selfie while commuting in a car and shared it with her 17.2 million followers on Instagram. The photo seems innocuous except for the red-and-yellow banner in the background, which reads: โClosely united around the party that has Xi as the core. Making relentless efforts to realize the Chinese dream of the great national rejuvenation.โ (็ดงๅฏๅข็ปๅจไน ่ฟๅนณไธบๆ ธๅฟ็ๅ ไธญๅคฎๅจๅด ไธบๅฎ็ฐไธญๅๆฐๆไผๅคงๅคๅ ด็ไธญๅฝๆขฆ่ไธๆๅฅๆ) -
Chinaโs education ministry to adjust bonus points in national college exams
The Ministry of Education revoked a policy that gave some students the advantage of extra points on the national college entrance exam. The move is expected to affect student athletes, medal winners of International Science Olympiads and other competitions in science subjects, provincial-level โexcellentโ students, and those who are honored for demonstrating outstanding deeds of morality. -
High school teacher fired after video shows him kissing student during tutoring session
A high school physics teacher in Shanxi Province was fired this week after video footage surfaced of him kissing a 17-year-old female student during a private tutoring session. -
SAPPRFT bans parodies of classic TV shows and films
On March 22, the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television released an urgent notice to ban โdefaming, distorting, and parodyingโ classic TV shows and films, which SAPPRFT thinks might โcause misunderstanding of the worksโ original meaning.โ
VIDEO OF THE DAY
Bargaining in Beijing
A video of a shopkeeperโs bargaining with an American at a counterfeit market in Beijing went viral on the Chinese internet. Though her English skills and bargaining tactics are common for shopkeepers in Chinaโs big cities, many internet users in China were impressed.
ON SUPCHINA
Why Chinese companies crush Western tech giants in China
While reading the news, Lawrence Kuok regularly comes across articles stating that Chinese tech giants have the Chinese government to thank for their dominance within China. For example, Bloomberg published an article earlier this month titled โChina protectionism creates tech billionaires who protect Xi,โ with the author stating, โThatโs helped create thriving domestic giants, including Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.โ Lawrence is here to argue: wrong.
Mingbai: What type are you? Chinese stereotypes
Like anywhere, China has stereotypes of all kinds. You probably know about metalheads, valley girls, rednecks, and chavs, but do you know about phoenix men, oily uncles, Buddhist youth, and the wash-cut-dries? Today, Mingbai introduces four oft-used stereotypes from the Chinese internet.
Kuora: The importance of engaging with China
With the Two Sessions set to wrap up, we turn again to politics, and this question, which Kaiser very recently answered โ it was originally posted on Quora on Sunday, March 18, 2018: Were Clinton-era (and earlier) engagement theorists naive to believe that economic reform would necessarily be a precursor to political reform and ultimate dissolution of the Leninist form of government?
Ink and drink: Watch this guy get a tattoo in a Beijing nightclub
Token foreigner bands? Yes. Expensive champagne bottles with sparkler fireworks attached being paraded around to the most loaded clients? Classic. Tattoo artist? Hmm. Of the in-club entertainments you expect inside one of Beijingโs flashier nightclubs, this last item probably wasnโt on the list.
Goodbye, SAPPRFT (but not Chinese censorship)
Last Tuesday, during the National Peopleโs Congress, China announced that it was dismantling its top media regulator, the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SAPPRFT). According to the notice, the five-year-old institution would be succeeded by a television and radio administration that would be directly attached to the State Council, or Cabinet, giving the Communist Party further control of Chinaโs media and entertainment.
A pro-Xi propaganda banner on model Bella Hadidโs Instagram sends the Chinese internet into confusion
American model Bella Hadid is currently in Shanghai, China, where she snapped and shared a selfie taken on March 20 that includes a pro-Xi propaganda banner reading, โClosely united around the party that has Xi as the core. Making relentless efforts to realize the Chinese dream of the great national rejuvenation.โ (็ดงๅฏๅข็ปๅจไน ่ฟๅนณไธบๆ ธๅฟ็ๅ ไธญๅคฎๅจๅด ไธบๅฎ็ฐไธญๅๆฐๆไผๅคงๅคๅ ด็ไธญๅฝๆขฆ่ไธๆๅฅๆ)
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 41
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: a sweeping plan to tackle China’s slow economic growth, Trumpโs China tariffs, Ofo’s latest fundraising round, Doug Young on Chinaโs plan to test commercial-quality 5G wireless services next year, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
Sinica Podcast: The Chinese student experience in America, with Siqi Tu and Eric Fish
Two researchers of Chinese students in America discuss the identity issues that these young people face, as well as how the Chinese student experience abroad has changed over the years โ and since Trumpโs election.
Video:
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Viral video: Not your average waitress
A female waitress in Hunan Province can hold nearly 20 bowls of noodles at the same time. -
Viral video: Exercise makes this woman ageless
A 50-year-old Chinese woman shares her secret for staying young. โRemember that every drop of sweat is a bullet to fight against aging,โ she said. -
Video: 2,000-year-old booze and sword discovered in China
About 10 fluid ounces of liquor and a 23-inch bronze sword were discovered inside tombs that date back 2,000 years to the Qin dynasty. -
Video: Xi Jinping takes an oath of allegiance to the constitution
Xi Jinping became the first Chinese president to take a public oath of allegiance to the constitution on Saturday. Earlier that day, he was reelected as the Chinese president and chairman of the Central Military Commission.
PHOTO FROM MICHAEL YAMASHITA
Styrofoam overload
In this photo from the 1990s (exact year unknown), a man transports a huge bundle of Styrofoam that is to be recycled in Guangzhou. China used to be the worldโs biggest consumer of scrap. In 2016, the country accounted for about 51 percent of the worldโs plastic scrap imports. However, in keeping with Chinaโs increased efforts to clean up its industrial pollution, it has implemented a new ban on the import of other countriesโ plastic trash, which started on January 1, 2018.
โJia Guo











