Zhong Yan, Senior Fellow, CITIC Institute for Reform and Development Studies
Oct 19, 2018
Why is Trump waging a trade war against China?
Daniel Ikenson, Director, Cato Institute’s Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies
Oct 18, 2018
Trump’s hardline approach to China is less an abrupt policy pivot than it is the culmination of years of bipartisan hand-wringing in Washington over the question of how to respond to China's rise.
Wu Zurong, Research Fellow, China Foundation for Int'l Studies
Oct 15, 2018
The US is unfairly targeting China.
Oct 15, 2018
It is important to notice who started this trade war. We never want to have a trade war.
Sun Chenghao, Fellow, Center for International Security and Strategy of Tsinghua University; Visiting Scholar, Paul Tsai China Center of Yale Law School
Wang Xiaonan, Beijing-based media commentator
Oct 12, 2018
Friction is inevitable for two powers both at the nascent stage of a new era; after all, this era is unprecedented in history.
Han Liqun, Researcher, China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations
Oct 11, 2018
There are three important elements.
Hugh Stephens, Distinguished Fellow, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada
Oct 11, 2018
The conclusion of the USMCA on September 10 revealed a few hidden surprises, including Article 32.10, the “non-market clause” demanded by the U.S. This provision is egregious, unprecedented, and likely to be repeated by the U.S. in future negotiations with other trading partners.
Tian Feilong, Associate Professor, the Law School of Beihang University
Oct 09, 2018
China stands for multilateralism, and against Trumpism.
Oct 08, 2018
China's central bank announced measures to lower financing costs and spur growth amid concerns over the country's economy.
Richard Javad Heydarian, Professorial Chairholder in Geopolitics, Polytechnic University of the Philippines
Oct 03, 2018
Though trade diversions from the Sino-American trade war have benefited some Asian nations, much of the region, so far, has greeted it with trepidation. There is increasing worry about the unintended consequences not only for regional trade linkages, where China plays a pivotal role, but also the decades-long cold peace in Asia, which is looking increasingly fragile.