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DO WE HAVE A CHINA PROBLEM? ; YES: COUNTRY IS TOO BIG A THREAT TO ACCEPT INBALANCE
by
Tonelson, Alan
in
Tonelson, Alan
2006
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DO WE HAVE A CHINA PROBLEM? ; YES: COUNTRY IS TOO BIG A THREAT TO ACCEPT INBALANCE
by
Tonelson, Alan
in
Tonelson, Alan
2006
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DO WE HAVE A CHINA PROBLEM? ; YES: COUNTRY IS TOO BIG A THREAT TO ACCEPT INBALANCE
Newspaper Article
DO WE HAVE A CHINA PROBLEM? ; YES: COUNTRY IS TOO BIG A THREAT TO ACCEPT INBALANCE
2006
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Overview
Worse, a large and growing percentage of these products are not labor-intensive goods like apparel and toys, but advanced manufacturing products from the sectors that create the highest- paying U.S. jobs on average. And these Chinese goods keep taking share from their U.S.-made counterparts in the American market. China trade champions rightly note that many of these Chinese imports come from Chinese factories owned by U.S. multinational companies. But the explosive growth of American-owned or contracted production in China reveals that the trade agreements that have shaped U.S.-China economic relations were really outsourcing deals. Their main aim was helping these large U.S. firms supply American customers from China. Indeed, China's $148 billion trade surplus with the United States so far this year alone equals nearly 38 percent of the entire 2005 U.S. defense budget. Yet with few in Washington recognizing the link, U.S. trade policy literally keeps arming America's likeliest future rival.
Publisher
Madison Newspapers, Inc
Subject
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