
Originally Posted by
Donald Rilea
A major part of the problem for the US, so it seems to me, is that we've let so much of our manufacturing base go abroad to China, Mexico, Indonesia, Pakistan, and other countries.
While clothes, toys, and other goods may be made in those countries by local sub-contractors working for US-based firms, they are counted as imports to the US, and thusly help form a major part of the trade deficits we have with those countries, especially China.
Quite frankly, there needs to be an end to tax breaks for US firms that out-source manufacturing and other industries abroad, and tax and other incentives given to those American firms that either retain production facilities within the US or start them up.
This, by itself, won't accomplish the disentangling process between the US and China, but, it will begin to reduce the trade deficit we now have with the Chinese, and provide the kinds of semi-skilled and skilled positions that historically have helped many Americans advance from the ranks of the poor and working classes to the lower middle class and above.
This doesn't mean a kind of autarchy, in which the only goods on offer in American shops would be American-made. Rather, it means that American-made goods would become more prominent than they have been for the past twenty to twenty-five years.
Another thing that our government can do is to recognise the fact that, while China is neither our enemy nor our friend, as Mr. London points out, but that it is a key player in the Asia-Pacific region, with legitimate interests of its own.
Quite frankly, some of the US government's moves in recent years, like the various arms sales to Taiwan, which China regards as a breakaway, but integral, part of China, various Congressional resolutions calling for unconditional US assistance to Taiwan in case of a Chinese invasion of the island over the years, and most recently, our agreement to sell nuclear fission materials to India, which, as far as I know, has yet to be passed by the Indian Constituent Assembly, all contribute to a climate where the Chinese government feels quite threatened by American policies in the Asia-Pacific region.
Actions like those have to stop, just as much as the Chinese should back off on their various threats to invade Taiwan and reunify it with China by force, and begin negotiations with the Taiwan government on talks designed to eventually bring about some sort of reunification with the mainland.
Likewise, Chinese investment in, and support for, governments like the Sudan's must be scaled back, or cut off entirely, until such time as those governments either change their policies and actions, or are changed.
This is a process that is going to take quite a while, Folks, and it means that the American and Chinese governments, and peoples, are going to have to stop seeing each other through the left-over Cold War ideological prisms that we have since 1949, as well as through historical prisms, such as the "Yellow Peril" here, or the dirty American imperialists prism in some circles in the PRC, and see each other for what we are.
That, in a nut-shell, is two powers, one established, the other in the process of establishing itself as a regional and world power, with different ambitions and interests, not all of which are compatible.
But, this doesn't mean that ALL of the US's and China's interests and ambitions are incompatible, either.
These are going to have to be worked out on a case-by-case basis over time.
Anyway, that's my in-expert opinion on the subject. Next!!!!
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