Today The Detail looks at the escalating US/China trade war – and China’s surprisingly patriotic response to Donald Trump’s blustering, which is looking increasingly like an effort by the US President to distract from domestic issues. But although the deficit falls overwhelmingly in China’s favour, it has the most to lose here. 

Trade tensions between the United States and China have reached a fever pitch. They escalated when the Trump administration broke a truce by hiking tariffs on $200 billion dollars’ worth of Chinese imports.

Stephen Jacobi, The Executive Director of the New Zealand China Council explains: “This all stems from this trade deficit, which exists between China and the United States.”

Last year, the United States exported $120 billion dollars’ worth of local goods into China; a fraction of the $549 billion dollars in Chinese goods imported into the US.

But Jacobi says the trade deficit isn’t straight forward.

“Fifty percent of this deficit is created by American companies in China exporting back to the United States. This is a problem that is partly of America’s own making.”

Jacobi says: “It reflects the close integration between the two economies and the sort of structural shift we’ve seen in international trade.”

US President Donald Trump started the tariff tennis match, trying to price China out of his domestic markets.

Jacobi says, “He [Trump] is of the view that trade is a zero-sum game.”

For Trump, it’s an image game. Jacobi says if China is perceived to be doing better than the United States in trade, as judged by the size of its trade surplus or America’s trade deficit, Trump sees it as a problem and something that needs to be addressed.

“And it has to be said that he [Trump] has continued to focus attention on this and has been taking the actions that arise from that sort of analysis, by seeking to pressure China to change its ways.”

Jacobi was in Beijing 10 days ago where people felt the dispute was on the way towards being resolved.

“But now that mood has changed.”

Jacobi says the reason behind the raised tariffs is unclear.

“Is it a bargaining element because they’re trying to get a final agreement across the line or is it something else completely?”

Jacobi suggests that Trump is trying to distract voters from less flattering news: The Meuller report; Joe Biden launching his presidential campaign; and his own argument with the Federal Reserve about interest rates.

The response from China has been unexpected.

The Peoples’ Republic has maintained a strong backhand, firing back with its own tariffs on billions’ worth of US imports.

China’s state television broadcaster, CCTV, is report the trade war as a political issue, calling it the ‘Peoples’ Trade War’.

Dr Hongzhi Gao, Associate Professor at the school of marketing and international business at Victoria University of Wellington, is astonished by the media movement.

Gao says: “The worst case scenario is that trading will stop between the two nations, and if that happens it will hurt China more than the US.

“That’s why at the moment, the Chinese state media is describing something which is symbolic – calling for people to unite, rather than point to the fact of who is going to suffer more.”

With both superpowers throwing their weight behind each new set, It is unclear as to who is ahead in the game.

Donald Trump is telling US media: “I think we’re winning”, and writing the whole thing off as a “squabble”. While the Chinese state message continues, “China will fight to the finish”.

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