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Unwinding America's Catastrophic China Mistakes
Townhall.com ^ | December 17, 2021 | Neil Patel

Posted on 12/17/2021 5:38:25 AM PST by Kaslin

Do you remember Armand Hammer? If you're over 50, you may. Hammer was a business tycoon who died in 1990. He was most famous for his deal-making with the Soviet Union. Hammer would cut business deals directly with the Kremlin. This was unusual; most U.S. businesses had very few dealings with America's greatest adversary. Today, by contrast, many American multinational businesses see their growth as much or more tied to China, our new primary adversary, as they do to America.

I began my career as a young lawyer on a special congressional committee set up to investigate the transfer of sensitive U.S. missile technology to China in the 1990s. As a result of our investigation, two of America's top satellite companies -- Hughes and Loral -- were forced to pay record multimillion-dollar fines for transferring dangerous missile technologies to China. As you read the news that China has now launched hypersonic nuclear-capable missiles around the globe, remember where it all started. American businesses helped them along the way.

Hughes and Loral were just the tip of the spear. In the 1990s, after the Soviet collapse, there was a sense that the world was entering a period of total U.S. supremacy. There was no world peer. As we now know, this didn't last very long. China filled the void quickly. Unlike the days when Hammer was noteworthy for his singular business exploits in the Soviet Union, China figured out how to use the top corporate powers of its greatest adversary, the United States, to fuel its own growth.

The first major step American business executed was taking down trade barriers to China. Open trade, they argued, would lead to a more open China. A more internationally intertwined China would lead to human rights reforms, the argument continued. Interestingly, Hammer had tried to make the same exact arguments about the Soviet Union: ''The Soviet leadership is gradually coming to see trade, rather than confrontation with the West, as the way to improve economic conditions." Luckily, most Americans didn't buy it. President Ronald Reagan certainly didn't. The U.S. did not trade extensively with the Soviets. What trade existed was heavily regulated, especially in the technology area. Corporate America, as a general matter, was on the sidelines.

With the Soviet collapse, attitudes seemed to change. The lure of the huge Chinese marketplace and the promise of cheap Chinese labor was too much for corporate America to resist. Finally, in 2000, the U.S. permanently normalized trade relations with China and voted to allow China into the World Trade Organization. Everything since has been a total disaster.

Drive across small-town America and you will see hollowed out communities, boarded-up main streets and shuttered plants that used to employ thousands. This decay has led to skyrocketing drug overdoses, increasing crime and a political upheaval that's still playing out. It's too simplistic to pin everything bad that's happened in America on China's rise and our China policies. It's just as naive to pretend it hasn't had a big effect.

Nothing predicted by those who promoted free trade with China has come true. Proponents said normalized trade relations with China would reduce our trade deficit. The deficit has instead skyrocketed, led chiefly by a tripling of America's trade deficit with China. Proponents said normalized trade with China would benefit America's economy. Instead, a full one-third of American manufacturing jobs have disappeared, with studies showing many moved to China. Proponents also famously predicted that opening trade would ease China toward a period of political liberalization and respect for human rights. This prediction by so many so-called experts was so wrong that it should be at the top of the list of why Americans have lost faith in national institutions and leaders. You can't be this wrong about things this important and retain the trust of the people. China, of course, didn't liberalize. They are running slave labor camps right now.

Free-market believers love free trade for good reason. It makes sense. It adds efficiency and increases total economic output. What we did not debate enough is how free trade works with a country like China. When one side is a free capitalist market and the other is still a closed, corrupt mercantilist market willing to use slave labor, how will things work out?

In total, it's hard to argue that the normalized trade relations with China have been a net positive for average Americans. They have definitely been a net positive for some multinational American businesses, Wall Street and the very wealthy. American businesses have used cheap Chinese labor to great benefit. How much of that benefit conveys back to the American people is debatable. Americans who invest in equities benefit from higher stock valuations for some American companies. Others benefit from cheaper goods made in China. The downsides include lost jobs, broken communities and weakened national security due to dependence on a foreign power.

With the benefits from U.S./China relations flowing to a small segment of the American population and the detriments flowing to the masses, the political ramifications of America's huge China mistake of the past 20 years are still playing out. The U.S. government is finally getting around to taking action against China's use of slave labor many years after evidence of it was first uncovered. America is also thinking more clearly about its dependence on China for crucial goods and services. We are debating how to decouple ourselves from this dependence on a repressive and largely adversarial China. This debate is long overdue. The politicians who figure out how to do this while minimizing harm to the economy will be rewarded. Those who continue to ignore it will be punished.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: armandhammer; ccp; china; freemarkets; hughes; loral; neilpatel; slavelabor; townscrawl; trade; ussr
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To: central_va

Actually, i agree that tariffs are useful as a means to change end costs to consumers to alter buying habits.

When China-subsidized companies sell a wide screen flat screen television for under 300$, no customer is complaining until the product fails. Meanwhile, competition is wiped out.


21 posted on 12/17/2021 7:20:12 AM PST by drSteve78 (Je suis Deplorable. STILL)
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To: Kaslin

Perhaps our labor unions should turn to domestic job creation.

Funds for a factory startup could come from union and local & state government pension funds, worker share purchases, and a bond issue.


22 posted on 12/17/2021 7:25:53 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin

Another possibility is specialized small factories.

One group of a few people might own and run a small automated casting factory.

Another group of people might own a small casting machining factory.


23 posted on 12/17/2021 7:29:52 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin

Unions need to become more like venture capitalists and less like payroll deduction seekers.


24 posted on 12/17/2021 7:34:26 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin
For the record, Armand Hammer a complete hard Leftist dirtbag.

Armand Hammer founder of the American communist party..
25 posted on 12/17/2021 7:37:12 AM PST by Antoninus (Republicans are all honorable men.)
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To: Kaslin

China can fairly easily build high-quality weapons systems.

It only takes will, money and the hiring of the right skilled people.


26 posted on 12/17/2021 7:38:59 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin

“Unwinding”

China unless it does something stupid, like trying to take over Taiwan, only to have its major cities nuked, will be the leading economic and military power for at least the next 100 years.

Like the US surpassing Great Britain from the mid-1880s to 1918, China will gradually surpass the US in more and more fields.


27 posted on 12/17/2021 7:46:00 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin

The Chinese constitution requires people to work if they are capable and not too young or old.


28 posted on 12/17/2021 7:48:51 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: Kaslin

The Chinese don’t have SNAP rice bowls.

If you want to eat rice, get job.


29 posted on 12/17/2021 7:51:11 AM PST by Brian Griffin ( )
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To: knarf
"... and the clintons."

Such as,

In a good-will gesture toward China, the Clinton Administration has agreed to sell it a sophisticated $8 million supercomputer, senior Administration officials said today...The Clinton Administration is determined to grab an ever-larger share of China's market, the fastest growing in the world, and reduce a trade deficit that could exceed the one with Japan by the end of the decade.
the decision to go forward with the supercomputer sale is strategically more important because it signals the Administration's willingness to sell high-technology equipment to Beijing...The Administration decided to allow the sale despite clear evidence that China has broken its promises to Washington by exporting M-11 missile components and technology to Pakistan. Those exports violated an international missile control accord. - https://www.nytimes.com/1993/11/19/world/us-will-allow-computer-sale-to-court-china.html

But not only:

The White House announced today that it planned to extend preferential trade benefits to China for another year, arguing that it was the best way to support economic and political reform in the world's most populous country. The announcement immediately drew protests from Democrats on Capitol Hill, who argued that the President's policy of "constructive engagement" with China had produced no tangible results. In fact, they said, China has engaged in increasingly provocative acts -- including the underground testing of a large nuclear bomb, harassment of American reporters, denial of visas to the Chairmen of the Senate Intelligence and Foreign Relations Committees and a failure to make any significant improvement in human rights...Representative Nancy Pelosi, who has led the House fight against most-favored-nation status for China, said that opponents may choose a narrower approach this year. - https://www.nytimes.com/1992/06/03/world/bush-seeks-trade-benefits-for-china.html

Meaning Democrats can become as conservatives when a Republican acts like Democrats

They have set up kings, but not by me: they have made princes, and I knew it not: of their silver and their gold have they made them idols, that they may be cut off. (Hosea 8:4)

30 posted on 12/17/2021 8:27:12 AM PST by daniel1212 ( Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save + be baptized + follow Him!)
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To: daniel1212
I had HOPED someone would remember and have data linking my memory to what I remembered and what I forgot.

THANX, DAN !

31 posted on 12/17/2021 9:03:21 AM PST by knarf (?<p>Little kids grow up to be adults that get into powerful positions and act out their thoughts.<pg)
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To: drSteve78

My son purchased two wide screens for me and both failed within a year. Purchased at Costco. There is no repair for them.


32 posted on 12/17/2021 10:32:31 AM PST by caww ( )
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To: knarf
"I had HOPED someone would remember and have data linking my memory to what I remembered and what I forgot."

And, at least we sometimes remember we forgot something, even if we cannot remember what it is!

33 posted on 12/17/2021 7:45:12 PM PST by daniel1212 ( Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save + be baptized + follow Him!)
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To: central_va

[ Most Freepers are anti US worker free traders. They don’t care. They see a union thug behind every blade of grass... ]

Unions are just medieval guilds ( with the veneer of “democracy” ) and just as destructive.

That being said the alternative is just as bad, ie.... “Not so free trade”

If the government was ONLY funded by tariffs ( what the founder had ORIGINALLY INTENDED ) there would be no need for unions and foreign trade would not be so destructive


34 posted on 12/17/2021 7:57:23 PM PST by GraceG ("If I post an AWESOME MEME, STEAL IT! JUST RE-POST IT IN TWO PLACES PLEASE")
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To: Kaslin

Chicom - bump for later....


35 posted on 12/17/2021 8:16:10 PM PST by indthkr
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To: daniel1212
DAMN !

That made sense !

I am SO screwed.

Merry Christmas

36 posted on 12/17/2021 9:28:13 PM PST by knarf (?<p>Little kids grow up to be adults that get into powerful positions and act out their thoughts.<pg)
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