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The *Real* Chinese Threat: Trump Tariffs Address Decades of IP Theft

<p>If there has been one Trump administration policy that fellow Republicans at large have been unabashed about loudly questioning&comma; it&rsquo&semi;s the populist president&rsquo&semi;s crusade for what he describes as &ldquo&semi;fair trade&rdquo&semi; in the form of tariffs on a myriad of imports from countries purported to be killing US exports with their own trade barriers and policies&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It&rsquo&semi;s certainly not a universally sanctioned approach&comma; with the clear majority of economists advocating for free trade and reduced barriers as the proven path to global economic success&period;<strong> But Trump isn&rsquo&semi;t necessarily interested in maximizing global utility in theoretical equations&comma; rather his &ldquo&semi;America First&rdquo&semi; platform seeks to preserve and encourage domestic US industry with external economic costs ranking as much less important&period;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The idea isn&rsquo&semi;t entirely unfounded&period; The WTO is surprisingly flexible in terms of allowing countries to erect trade barriers&semi; and as Trump is keen to point out <strong>most do against the US<&sol;strong>&period; There are even economic arguments for barriers&comma; though economists at large tend to gloss over them&comma; including supporting the growth of domestic &lsquo&semi;infant industries&rsquo&semi; &lpar;emerging markets not babies&rpar; as well as halting and&sol;or preventing &lsquo&semi;dumping&rsquo&semi; of goods onto domestic markets in an effort to eradicate homegrown competition&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But in the frame of contemporary perspective&comma; with the ever increasing growth and interdependence of the global digital economy&comma; <strong>Trump&rsquo&semi;s tariffs may actually work on a glaring issue regarding China the world and its WTO have utterly failed to address for decades&semi; intellectual property theft<&sol;strong>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Nebulous Chinese government practices have often resulted in very much physical property theft&comma; like the 1990s eviction of McDonalds from their Beijing flagship three-story franchise location&hellip&semi; in the second year of a 20-year lease&period; However much less visible&comma; yet far more massive in scale&comma; is the rampant theft of intellectual property&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>China&rsquo&semi;s egregious and unabashed large-scale operations including counterfeit goods&comma; pirated software&comma; and stolen confidential trade data&comma; have been wreaking havoc on the global economy at large for a decade&period; The independent and bipartisan <strong>&lsquo&semi;US Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property&rsquo&semi; reported the annual cost in 2017 to the US alone to be nearly &dollar;600 Billion dollars<&sol;strong>&comma; calculated in terms of counterfeit goods&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When China was admitted into the WTO in 2001&comma; the main line of contention for their entry was an egregious record of shameless and overt property theft&period; Alas&comma; the WTO eventually granted admission to the then emerging economic superpower without any substantial or firm measures taken to combat this Chinese phenomenon&comma; or even to prevent it in the future aside from empty promises on China&rsquo&semi;s account&period; <strong>Trump&rsquo&semi;s tariffs&comma; even if otherwise debatable in merit&comma; are the first major attempt to address this huge economic loss<&sol;strong> since that defeat&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The tariffs have produced a mixed bag of economic outcomes at home that includes a booming steel industry&comma; as well as rising prices in other sectors as a result of counter tariffs and externalities&period; However&comma; on the flipside&comma; <strong>they&rsquo&semi;ve been universally hard hitting on China&rsquo&semi;s economy<&sol;strong>&comma; with each fresh set of hundreds of billions of goods being added resulting in instability and lost confidence in a market China already has a history of freezing and interfering with at the will of the regime&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However theoretically questionable Trump&rsquo&semi;s trade wars have been&comma; they have for their part forced China to come to terms with their reality of still playing second fiddle to the American economy&comma; which makes up nearly a quarter of the global total&period; If China wants to play in America&rsquo&semi;s pool it appears they&rsquo&semi;ll have to play by the rules&comma; enforced by a President that shows no signs of planning to bow out of the battle of markets any time soon&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Author&rsquo&semi;s Perspective&colon;<&sol;strong> Personally&comma; I don&rsquo&semi;t support the tariffs at large&comma; though I am banking on the hopes that they&rsquo&semi;re merely a negotiating tactic meant to induce other countries to lower and&sol;or eliminate their own&period; That said this is a completely valid benefit of Trump&rsquo&semi;s willingness to engage China&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The WTO is toothless and its regulations purposely vague and flexible&period; It has proven to be an inadequate check on countries like China that cheat the system on an industrial scale&period; The Chinese regime is still far from a friend of the US&comma; with intelligence reports from the likes of the German&rsquo&semi;s to internal Chinese dissidents presenting ever more troubling evidence of mass Chinese spying and general international malpractice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As I stated&comma; I don&rsquo&semi;t support the tariffs&comma; but I&rsquo&semi;m perfectly willing and able to accept this as a genuine positive result of them and the general economically aggressive attitude towards China&period; That should be a powerful indicator to the reader in terms of truth&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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