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Why there may be room to move on China-US trade in a populist Trump White House
- The Republican presidential nominee managed to hammer out a deal with Beijing on his last watch – something Biden is yet to do, analyst says
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A Trump 2.0 administration is sure to mean a more protective and populist America but there may still be room for the US and China to address their trade dispute, analysts said.
Accepting the Republican Party nomination for the US presidential election on Thursday, Donald Trump vowed to reshore car manufacturing and put tariffs of up to 200 per cent on each imported vehicle.
He said he would reverse President Joe Biden’s support for electric vehicles, saying they were “green new scams”.
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The speech to the party’s national convention was his first since surviving an assassination attempt over the weekend and included a call for unity and protection of the US, which he said had “long been taken advantage of” by countries like China.
Zhu Feng, an international relations professor at Nanjing University, said Trump had been expected to to push for tougher trade policies on China, given the US’ increasingly “America-centric” and “inward looking” ideology.
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To cope with it, China had to show “strategic resilience”, he said.
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