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The Trump Administration’s announcement last week that it is planning to levy tariffs on $50-60 billion worth of imports from China risks sparking a trade war that could hurt businesses in both countries and around the world, and even undermine the established global trading order if it spirals out of control. Given the importance of trade and foreign investor activity for China’s economy, there is a chance that US actions will yield some concessions from China that are helpful for MNC business, but this scenario will likely take a while to play out. The Conference Board China Center has been tracking US-China trade relations very carefully over the past 18 months, and we recommend that our members review several key pieces that we sent out previously which anticipated the events now transpiring and outlined a range of important planning assumptions for MNCs. Collated below is a set of thought pieces that illuminate how and why the US and China got to where they are today, and the likely path the confrontation will take going forward. In particular, we recommend members quickly review two of the pieces, “Locked and Loaded -- US Trade Policy on China” and “Hope for the best, plan for the worst -- A look at the potential negative consequences of US-China friction”. With respect to interpreting current events, members should consider a few key things: We will be providing more insights as the dust begins to settle and final policy formulations begin to clarify. In the meantime, we encourage member companies to review the following reports on this topic that we've published along the way: China Center Research Brief: CFIUS Reform Set to Disrupt Business as Usual for MNCs in China The reform and empowerment of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has the potential to dramatically disrupt many traditional partnership approaches MNCs have been using in China for many years – including co-investment arrangements that have become popular recently. China Center Quick Note: Locked and Loaded -- US Trade Policy on China 30 October, 2017 History will likely show that 2017 represented not a time of relaxation on China by the Trump administration, but rather a period of tactical preparation by the administration’s trade team. 22 April, 2017 Using WIOD data, we are able to identify the extent to which the economies of China and the United States are mutually reliant in terms of total national output – in trade-related terms. China Center Reference Paper: The New China Ideology -- Trump's Team 06 April, 2017 The people the new president surrounds himself with will shape the future of US-China business relations. Who are they and what do we know about their thinking? China Center Chart Dive: New data reveal less severe trade imbalance between the US and China 15 March, 2017 A new analysis from The Conference Board brings vast and complex global value chain dependencies into resolution and, in doing so, paints a starkly different picture of the bilateral trade imbalance. 06 March, 2017 China’s treatment of Norway, South Korea, and Japan during recent politically motivated economic disputes is instructive for understanding how Beijing may respond to provocations from Washington. Foreign MNCs, especially US brands, should catalog their potential risk exposures stemming from China’s formal and informal retaliatory tools and make appropriate preparations. Additionally, the Conference Board’s global offices, in conjunction with the China Center, has launched an initiative on Trade and Global Value Chains where the full resources of the Conference Board’s thought leadership on this issue are now housed. Please see here to access that content: https://www.conference-board.org/resources-on-trade/
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