James H. Nolt, Adjunct Professor at New York University
Mar 08, 2019
Much of Trump’s wish list is pie-in-the-sky. If there is any paper agreement much beyond what China offered last May, it will consist largely of empty promises that China will be unable or unwilling to keep.
Niu Tiehang, Senior Fellow, CCIEE
Mar 07, 2019
The China-US trade war is ultimately a war of attrition; both sides will lose and in the end, there will be no winner. It is inevitable the trade dispute will develop into to other dimensions of investment, finance, exchange rates, high technology, and other non-trade areas.
Mar 07, 2019
Goods trade deficits surged in 2018 due to strong domestic demand fuelled by lower taxes pulled in imports.
Mar 07, 2019
Huawei on Thursday confirmed it is suing the U.S. government over a section of a defense bill that restricted its business in the U.S.
Mar 06, 2019
U.S. has slammed program as a subsidy-stuffer to advance China as global technology leader at U.S. expense.
Dingding Chen, Professor at Jinan University, Founder and President of Intellisia Institute
Yu Xia, Assistant research fellow, Intellisia Institute
Mar 05, 2019
With a truce in sight, China needs to stay alert as the U.S. might seek to challenge it in other fields.
Mar 04, 2019
While North Korea negotiations have collapsed, the Trump administration is now focused on reaching an agreement with China.
Mar 04, 2019
Both countries could lift some tariffs imposed last year, and Beijing would agree to ease restrictions on American products.
Stephen Nagy, Professor, Department of Politics and International Studies at the International Christian University
Mar 01, 2019
The Trump administration’s negotiation pattern historically has been to escalate tensions and then agree to a modest change. We should expect nothing less in the outcome of the China-US trade negotiations.
Peter Bittner, Lecturer, University of California, Berkeley
Mar 01, 2019
While President Trump claims that a trade deal is close at hand, it is unclear whether the US can entice China to concede to any of its key demands. It remains to be seen whether the negotiations will be successfully resolved and, most importantly, who will gain the upper hand.