Friday, January 20, 2017

Three ways China wins under U.S. President Trump


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  • In fact these 3 scenarios will happen under Trump 4 year administration. 
  • The Global political and economic balance will shift from US to China and China will emerge a dominant force. 
  • The reason being, Trump lack the strategic depth and does not display any flare or vision to be able to upsurge China's "growing up" to fulfil the role of World Leadership. 
  • Trump is more engaged in personal vendetta, reactive response to criticism that enraged him, tic for tac response --- but fail to see the underlying global undercurrent that is sweeping against US interest. 
  • In fact, Trump is aiding and pushing US leadership away - that will help China to fill up the void and leadership role that traditionally US is strong in.
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    • Trump disposition during election - hitting his rivals did not change even after winning the election. 
    • Trump disposition of hitting his rivals -- is now directed at US traditional Allies, Partners, Friends - not to mention its adversaries. 
    • Seem like anyone who cross his path - will be hit by Trump.
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      • lol. You are the one shortsighted and funnie. Do you really think trump will let these things happen, things that are detrimental to U.S. You are only seeing the surface and not his other side of character
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  • @ Pierce the heart. I will like to be proven wrong.
  • I will open my eyes to see if Trump prove me wrong. So far to date, 
  • Trump did not offer any Economic deals that have mutual benefits for both US and US Allies, Partners and Friends. 
  • All his tweets and statements are detrimental to the Allies, Partners and Friends. I will love to be proven wrong. 
  • As it stand now, my assessment is still --- China will upsurge US - if US go down the path of protectionism and "Benefit me while Damn others".
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    • As it stand now, China-led RCEP, FTAAP and One Belt One Road --- is already upsurging US Economic initiative - and Trump is restricting trade with US Allies, Partners and Friends - offending all of them. 
    • China meanwhile will link up all Asia Pacific Countries as Trade Partners under RCEP and the larger FTAAP framework - while extending the connectivity all the way to Russia, Central Asia and Europe - and even to Africa via the One Belt One Road. 
    • All these initiative offer US$100 trillion to the Trading Partners and winched all US Allies, Partners and Friends - from Asia Pacific, Europe, Central Asia and Africa to become China Allies, Partners and Friends. 
    • US is not even one of them - as Trump announce to drop TPP. US under Trump now is trying to catch China's tail - and China through "One Piece of Masterstroke" -- defeat Trump in "Just One Strike" ---- without even expending one bullet. China shine in the WEF - as Champion for Globalisation - while Trump stand out as "Anti-Globalisation, Anti-Trade". 
    • So how to convince the World that Trump is on the "upper hand" -- where China is "leading all the initiatives --- all the way".
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      • Just by doing math alone will have helped to support my hypothesis. 
      • (1) China GDP - US$20 trillion 
      • (2) Japan GDP - US$5 trillion 
      • (3) ASEAN GDP - US$4 trillion 
      • (4) Australia GDP - US$1.2 trillion 
      • (5) India GDP - US$2.3 trillion 
      • (6) S Korea GDP - US$1.4 trillion 
      • (7) Russia GDP - US$1.3 trillion 
      • (8) Taiwan GDP - US$520 billion 
      • not sure whether I have covered all the Asia Pacific Countries. 
      • All these form part of RCEP. 
      • With FTAAP and One Belt One Road - to Central Asia, to Europe (EU GDP $20 trillion) and to Africa ---- it will provide a whopping US$100 trillion trade revenue. 
      • US GDP - US$20 trillion -- now Trump want to drop TPP. Want to close its border, want to restrict trade with trading partners. 

      • What is Trump offering to US Allies, Partners and Friends --- compare to China US$100 trillion? 

      • Trump lose, China Win. China take over Global Leadership. Period.

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        • Now @ Pierce the Heart --- provide me numerical facts to prove me wrong. 
        • If you cannot, tell Trump to provide me numerical facts to prove me wrong. 
        • Don't tweet. Tweet is not fact. 
        • Provide me numerical fact that US can upsurge China. 

        • As it stand now, China will thumb Trump.
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          • Simply put, China is harnessing all the Economic Strength of all its Trading Partners, Allies and Friends - to provide synergy and invoke the Economies of Scale for Trade - where 1+1=3. 

          • Trump is alienating all US Trading Partners, Allies and Friends = by attempting to do it alone with "Win-Lose outcome" - where 1-1=0.
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            • @Pierce the Heart - don't tell me Trump "secret weapon" is to do one-by-one bilateral deals to upsurge China. 
            • It is nothing spectacular. 
            • (1) Many Countries already have bi-lateral FTA with US. 
            • Many Countries also have FTA with many other Countries as well. It will not provide the upside trade revenue as compare to what China RCEP, FTAAP and One Belt One Road is offering. 

            • (2) The closet multilateral trade deal that can rival China-led multilateral deal is the TPP -- in which Trump say he will drop it the moment he come into office - without even understanding the significance of TPP or even have privy to the details of TPP. 
            • He is only good at tweet - "scrap TPP" --- and offer the Global Leadership to China. 
            • Look at what happen in the current ongoing WEF (World Economic Forum). 
            • Non of the participants worldwide is convince that Trump will be able to pull a trick to upsurge China Economic initiatives. 
            • Most are more worried that Trump will dampen the World Economic climate and World Economic growth while US led growth - may face the danger of "Boom and Bust" ---- short-term Boom that lead to overheating - follow by a big bust.
            • Will Trump end globalization? The doubt haunts Davos' elite

              RELATED QUOTES

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              HON117.50-0.41
              DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — It's been impossible to escape the shadow of Donald Trump at this year's gathering of the business elites at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
              Uncertainty over whether Trump's presidency will mark the end of globalization dominated discussions all week at an event synonymous with international business.
              Sure, lofty ambitions were discussed, from fighting epidemics to dealing with inequalities across the world. But inevitably all talk turned to Trump, who has promised to rewrite free trade deals and even slap tariffs on China, the world's second-largest economy.
              "Do I really think we're gonna go back to protectionism? I don't really know yet and I can promise you I'm paying a lot of attention to it because trade matters to us," said David Cote, chairman and CEO of industrial conglomerate Honeywell. "It's a little too early to press the panic button; we ought to see what ends up happening here."
              Roberto Azevedo, director-general of the World Trade Organization, the body that oversees trading rules, reminded delegates of the 1930s, when governments raised tariffs and wiped out two-thirds of global trade in three years.
              "You don't want to see that now. That would be a catastrophe of untold proportions," he said.
              "I think we should try not to talk ourselves into a trade war and I think we're seeing a lot of that."
              ___
              THE CASE AGAINST GLOBALIZATION
              Whether or not world trade goes into reverse, it's evident that globalization — the commitment to trade internationally and to lower barriers to doing business around the world —is under threat like no other time in decades.
              The main allegations are that it has increased inequalities in wealth, eroded job security for middle and lower-income families in developed countries, and kept a lid on wages as businesses seek low-cost workers in poorer countries. The breakneck pace of technological innovation has made many jobs redundant, particularly in industries like manufacturing.
              Anti-poverty charity Oxfam illustrated the issue of inequality starkly in a report this week in which it said that eight billionaires own as much wealth as half the world's population, or 3.6 billion people.
              There's a perception among many middle- and lower-income households in developed economies like the U.S. and Europe that globalization hasn't worked for them. And it's that unease that many say was behind Trump's victory and Britain's vote to leave the European Union.
              ___
              THE CASE FOR IT
              Globalization has helped lift hundreds of millions to escape poverty over the past few decades. Populous countries like China and India have enjoyed phenomenal growth, improved standards of living, life expectancy, literacy and employment rates.
              As though to underscore that point, China's leader visited the Davos forum this year for the first time.
              Chinese President Xi Jinping cast his country as a champion of free trade and stability. Though China does in fact put big limits on foreign companies in the country, Xi's message was clear: that China wants to take a bigger role on the global stage and keeping business flowing.
              "We must remain committed to promoting free trade and investment through opening up, and say no to protectionism," Xi said, without directly referencing Trump. "Pursuing protectionism is like locking oneself in a dark room. While wind and rain may be kept outside, so are light and air ... No one will emerge as a winner in a trade war."
              ___
              THE ROAD AHEAD
              The key will be what policies Trump actually puts in motion, and whether other countries follow the temptation to throw up bigger barriers to business.
              Britain will this year renegotiate its trade relations with the rest of the EU, the region it does most business with. And populist political movements have risen in countries like the Philippines and are increasingly prominent in rich nations like France, the Netherlands and Italy.
              "We may be at a point where globalization is ending," said Ray Dalio, founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates.
              German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, however, expressed doubt that the West would leave the defense of free trade to Chinese leadership.
              Beyond Trump, Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said the broader international system must change to deal with the growing inequalities evident in the Oxfam report.
              Theresa May, Britain's prime minister, sought to convince the Davos elite that Britain was not retreating from the global scene. But she did concede that policymakers have to support those for whom globalization is not working.
              "The forces of liberalism, free trade and globalization that have had, and continue to have, such an overwhelmingly positive impact on our world ... are somehow at risk of being undermined," she said.

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