Wednesday, February 5, 2025
China has prepared for a bigger trade war : Professor Jin Keyu: 4th Feb 2025
Keyu Jin: China Has Prepared For a Bigger Trade War
Rise of Asia
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Feb 4, 2025 #tariffs #chinavsusa #geopolitics
With Donald Trump back in the White House, the U.S. is once again turning up the heat on China, this time with even higher tariffs on Chinese exports. This move is set to reignite the trade war that Trump kicked off in 2018 during his first term. But the big question is, Can China handle the pressure? And more importantly, how will Beijing strike back? Well, Professor Keyu Jin has some fascinating insights on this, and you might be surprised by what she has to say.
#keyujin #tradewar #chinavsusa #geopolitics #tariffs
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Rise of Asia
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457 Comments
Eng Lam Yeo
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@kv7654
13 hours ago
I’m HAPPY to buy Chinese goods. I’m Canadian and will NEVER buy U.S. Since the 80’s I’ve been very careful about not buying U.S. and a million times more careful now.
In fact I just today cancelled a $45,000 order for the exterior of the lake house that we’re building, because I found out it was made in the US.
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@TingMo-n4i
20 hours ago
Professor Jin is on spot. Best economist in the world. She is super smart
92
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@InnocentBlackKitten-sw8jq
21 hours ago
Farid Zakaria seems to be totally unaware that China now has more foreign direct investment, more exports, more new innovations, more infrastructure, more internal and external tourists, and more trading partners than ever before. While the growth rate has slowed, the emphasis is on more quality growth. No runaway inflation, elimination of extreme poverty, growing middle class, better and greener technology, more ecological recovery, more energy and food security, better living standards, better education, growing satisfaction and self-confidence. All of these are happening in real time but completely ignored by the American media. Americans are living in an information bubble created by themselves.
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14 replies
@kckoay6211
21 hours ago
The fact speaks for itself.
When Trump launched his Trade War against China in 2018, China’s trade surplus was RMB2. 33 trillion, or US$321 billion at current exchange rate. But China’s trade surplus hit a record high in 2024 — reaching a symbolically significant US$1 trillion! That is a threefold increase in just over a 6 years period.
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2 replies
@WTHH2
21 hours ago
100 years of humiliation was never forgotten .๐ข
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13 replies
@hklheman
9 hours ago
Keyu is one of the brightest younger generation of economist and dissects with facts
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@NAL-rh5nh
20 hours ago
Well spoken. Yes, China knows the game well.
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3 replies
@petercabauatan767
21 hours ago
One should turn the question. Can the U.S. handle the pressure, is it prepared to do so, and is it as resilient and resourceful as China? Compare the two, to be fair. So you know which to place your bets on. Notwithstanding Trump, China has an edge. In fact China is rising, and the US is in decline.
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2 replies
@goldenmonkey963
22 hours ago
She so smart im in love with her brain!
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10 replies
@R8J5M9
21 hours ago
Definitely prepared.
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@siewkonsum7291
22 hours ago
China is a continuous self evolving, self correcting and self civilising huge land based country with a large population of 1.42 billions people, and is a nation of about 5,000 long years of civilization.
It has gone thru' ups & down thru' its long & continuous evolution & history as a big enduring nation State. Its internal social & cultural structures are well developed, in place to offer long term national resilience, strength and endurance.
China & the Chinese can, and will overcome all challenges in its development path towards being more developed, refined and cultured as a great nation moving forward into the future.
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7 replies
@felixchanlim2837
21 hours ago
Yes china always prepared !!!
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@Arcy0429
2 hours ago
Kudos to Professor Keyu Jin! Always objective on her analysis.
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@smoothoperator2008s
22 hours ago
US will buy same product 'with Chinese parts' from different country with higher price, with no tariff. hand-pink-waving
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8 replies
@hengongchua6250
19 hours ago
Keyu Jin she is such a highly intelligence lady. She can answer all questions without a second thought. Just answer straight directly. Amazing lady. Beside she is replying all the questions in perfect English which is not even her mother tongue.
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1 reply
@winartotan5643
20 hours ago
china is well prepared, yes
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@Gfthce3426
20 hours ago
As a Canadian I sincerely hope that Canada also quickly moves away from US trade . Our shared land mass is an asset but also is a detriment. We are land lock with ' what can in some ways be a monster. This senseless trade war will hopefully prompt our government to seek out alot more over sea's trade .
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2 replies
@stevenyellow7638
18 hours ago
What I think !!!!
The USA don’t like China but 99% Americans politicians love to listen to keyu Jin and believe what she said is correct ๐๐๐
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@jaytso1883
9 hours ago
The questions are shallow, the answers are deep.
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@weifan5161
20 hours ago
้ๅธธ็่ฟ็ไธไธไธๆต็
็่กจ่พพ,็พๅฅณๆฏไบบๆ❤
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@peterdeak9901
17 hours ago
I wish, Europe had someone like Professor Jin.
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4 replies
@danielwong2333
5 hours ago
Wow Professor Keyu so knowledgeble on the chinese economy and the world. She is top notch. Brilliant
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@JoneLang
22 hours ago
OMG, the interviewer knows nuts about anything intelligent to ask about China .. can i say this is reflective of the rest of the western world? The look in the mirror before you comment on others should be what the interviewer should do. All the jazz about believable data, healthcare lol
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@PravashLama-i9g
19 hours ago
I 10000000 pc agree with prof Keyu jin
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@jonathanzheng1685
16 hours ago
Chinese culture is prepared to overcome difficulties in advance. When I was a teenager, my Mama told me that Even If you have enough food and clothes, you will become poor if you can't plan ahead.
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@jaitiwari6819
19 hours ago
Professor Jin is so smart! Fareed Z is being schooled here. He seems in a daze… the revelation of truth and facts to him has him confused! Let us hope he will a bit less ignorant of China after this lesson.
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1 reply
@dumitrupreda6161
17 hours ago
She’s very smart & well spoken
those who know her in real life can confirm she’s ๐ฏ amazing
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@CoolGirl007
16 hours ago
Professor is beautiful
Undoubtedly China is a massive dragon over 5000 years of history
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@dannytsai3449
19 hours ago
Don't forget that he has declared bankruptcy seven times.
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@yuehanslam1593
16 hours ago
Our favourite daughter - it is all bout what she says and how she says it !! At the end of it, you always come away better informed.
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@Hypocrite-x9q
22 hours ago
The American Interviewer plays “Devil Advocate”
ha ha ha ha
He pretends not to know that:
China is RESILIENT.
China is SELF-RELIANT.
Whatever Trump does, China will also react in a proactive manner to show Trump the PROPER way, which:
“Hey dude, GET ALONG….chill, there’s no need to be threatening, bullying OR rude.”
HYPOCRISY - ma favorite dish.
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4 replies
@maureen-paulbarnes-vonkulm480
21 hours ago (edited)
The Chinese could see the writing on the wall long ago. They certainly will have prepared for sanctions and tariffs. They play the long game. We should consider that the use of sanctions and tariffs as a cudgel to force other countries, all about, to change is actually a sign of weakness not strength.
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@HerbertLin-y2l
21 hours ago
Tariffs are for losers
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@shubhamchande4360
17 hours ago
Great conversation ๐ฏ
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@quay007
19 hours ago
The prof is very charismatic. I have great admiration of her. Hope that whatevers she says is not just "hollow" statements.
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@SouthernCross-e2w
17 hours ago
Many have been predicting and hoping for the collapse of the Chinese economy since 2001๐คฃ๐คฃ๐คฃ
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@PaulaKat-x6d
10 hours ago
This is an important lesson for Canada also. Relying on trading allies indefinitely is never a good economic strategy, always be prepared.
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@l1215912002
19 hours ago
The advantages of China's manufacturing industry cannot be weakened by increasing tariffs.
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@davidrobinson2571
16 hours ago
1990. The Economist. China's economy has come to a halt.
1996. The Economist. China's economy will face a hard landing.
1998. The Economist: China's economy entering a dangerous period of sluggish growth.
1999. Bank of Canada: Likelihood of a hard landing for the Chinese economy.
2000. Chicago Tribune: China currency move nails hard landing risk coffin.
2001. Wilbanks, Smith & Thomas: A hard landing in China.
2002. Westchester University: China Anxiously Seeks a Soft Economic Landing.
2003. New York Times: Banking crisis imperils China.
2004. The Economist: The great fall of China?
2005. Nouriel Roubini: The Risk of a Hard Landing in China.
2006. International Economy: Can China Achieve a Soft Landing?
2007. TIME: Is China's Economy Overheating? Can China avoid a hard landing?
2008. Forbes: Hard Landing In China?
2009. Fortune: China's hard landing. China must find a way to recover.
2010: Nouriel Roubini: Hard landing coming in China.
2011: Business Insider: A Chinese Hard Landing May Be Closer Than You Think.
2012: American Interest: Dismal Economic News from China: A Hard Landing.
2013: Zero Hedge: A Hard Landing In China.
2014. CNBC: A hard landing in China.
2015. Forbes: Congratulations, You Got Yourself A Chinese Hard Landing.
2016. The Economist: Hard landing looms for China.
2017. National Interest: Is China's Economy Going To Crash.
2018. The Daily Reckoning: China's Coming Financial Meltdown.
2019. BBC: China's Economic Slowdown: How worried should we be?
2020. New York Times: Coronavirus Could End China's Decades-Long Economic Growth Streak.
2021. Bloomberg: Chinese economy risks deeper slowdown than markets realize.
2022. Bloomberg: China Surprise Data Could Spell RECESSION.
2023. Bloomberg: No word should be off-limits to describe China's faltering economy.
...
Yet it's already 2025 and China's economy is still going strong.
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1 reply
@kammantom
20 hours ago
Chinese always say “when a problem arises there’s always many situations”. Start with ad hoc then move to overcome and tame it.๐๐๐
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1 reply
@Laurence1260
6 hours ago
She is precise and closer to truth and reality of China and US, where often many people have wrong or partial information on China for some reason or purpose. Thanks MS Jin.
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@tomxutw
3 hours ago
Jin, totally agree with what you stated. Marvelous!
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@ajjoshi9232
2 hours ago (edited)
Professor's voice is melodious. The less the sound emanating from Fareed's vocal cord, the better is was for my ears.
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@ninakhan3803
21 hours ago
PRC has prepared itself for this since at least 8 years ago when a clown appeared on the horizon. PRC had planned well and PXi had executed the plans to a tee. It's a loudmouth who has to worry about the tariffs most.
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7 replies
@freedom3844
16 hours ago
China is very clever. So inspiration ❤
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@mgfunky
22 hours ago
at the end of the day, there is not a single country in the world today that's doing perfect. Every part of thgis earth are going through some some type of problem, and from all problems china is actually doing better than others. So if one tries to talk about the bad thngs than that is what you wanted to hear and you got trhat, but if you talk about the good things you will actually get more than bad things, and one of the most important part out of all discussion should be how's the people doing, and how are they feeling, enoying, and accomplishing things, but this area will never come up if you was only trying to look for bad things because for china specifically the proof for people question can't be clouded, covered up, misrepresented, because there's records, polls, data after data and it shows success. However, how many country is willing to put that part to the question and talked about. Not many, and definitely not US.
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1 reply
@ronaldliu8958
12 hours ago
Professor Ke Yu Jin is Sooo brilliant… to the point of amazement. Since Trump 1.0 & pandemic….the Chinese trade SURPLUS has INCREASED THREEFOLD! ! That speaks volumes ! !
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@leungcheng6945
21 hours ago
Yes
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@VaMoua-b1h
5 hours ago
They are probably more cautious to be sure they won't mess up.
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@PVLTD
3 hours ago
One of the main points that they didn’t mention is the Chinese consumers in general are reluctant to spend as they used to, which indirectly affected the economy. They are unwilling to spend more not because they don’t have money, but because they just preferred to put it on savings.
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@bobcharles7716
15 hours ago (edited)
The reason why the Chinese GDP number is slowing down is because they are spending less at home. But lets not forget their trade surplus is increasing and that trend is accelerating. I don't see how that can be a bad thing! If the Chinese want to increase their GDP by 2-3% all they have to do is double their defense spending to match that of the US.
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@alimmuhammad9275
20 hours ago
In the present situation it’s the US that has huge trade deficits , debt that exceeds total GDP. Extreme polarisation and uncertainty about Trump’s policies. The better question that Farid should ask himself Is the US capable of containing its own relative decline?
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@CarbonBlackLab
12 hours ago
Farid tries to sound like he knows his stuff, but he’s way out of his depth when it comes to China, ASEAN, and the Global South. His biggest hang-up is seeing developing countries as some kind of threat to the US, when in reality, China and the Global South are teaming up to break free from the US’s outdated imperialistic playbook. China’s had enough of the nonsense the US keeps pushing—their whole imperialistic mindset is stuck in the 90s and it shows.
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1 reply
@renepinto8986
5 hours ago
TRUE.
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@SWLoh-f1k
11 hours ago
It's interesting that Farid seemed not to believe in Chinese data. Put the data aside, he should do a special program on how the Chinese diaspora fare in economy in South East Asia. He may find out that under many challenges & difficult conditions in SEA, the Chinese diaspora are still can come out on top & lead the economy in these countries.
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@winnaung1238
20 hours ago
China has leading in many sectors infrastructure development projects worldwide, Ev sales more than the rest of the world combined, 5 g telecommunications infrastructure across the country manufacturing global hub if DeepSeek leading AI sector and that’ll be huge progress for China!!!!
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@annalisagomes2743
11 hours ago (edited)
@ 2:16, she was mistaken about the decrease in exports to the U.S. Exports from China to other developed countries, such as car batteries and vehicles, continue through these manufacturing partners. For instance, Mexico is home to China's electric vehicle manufacturing, with 40 percent of these exports going to America. This is why Trump is furious and determined to punish countries that are collaborating with China by bypassing tariffs on Chinese products. Gradually, China is losing its status as the manufacturing hub of the world, a trend that began during Donald Trump's first term. Many manufacturing companies in China have relocated to countries like India, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. More countries are discovering advanced manufacturing industries that could soon rival China's. EUs who benefit from Chinese parts also sell a lot of these to the USA. The EV cars that are directly manufactured in China will not enter Western countries.
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@kikitamkei8662
16 hours ago
CA$2.00
Thanks!
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Rise of Asia
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1 reply
@asgeetoo3464
12 hours ago
Lets go!!
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@LeonLKC
5 hours ago
The U.S. will struggle to be self-reliant on sourcing rare-earth elements, galium, geranium, tungsten, antimony etc. Not only the U.S. could not match China in mining, refining and/or processing of rare-earth elements, gallium, germanium, tungsten, antimoni etc., they will definitely face difficulty in sourcing from other countries, who do not enjoy economies of scale in mining and production compare to China's expertise and skill enjoyed for decades. Deng Xiaoping once quote 'the Middle East has oil, while China has rare-earth'. The U.S. is aware of this such a long time ago, and have yet to come up with long term plan to address China's dominance of rare-earth elements which are so vital to military assets, semiconductors, electric vehicles, etc. Not only this challenge, their allies are facing such dilemma as well.
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@jshomer8773
8 hours ago
"The dollar is declining", yet it has a 60% share of the foreign currency reserves while the yuan has only 2% (mostly held by Hong Kong)
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@1bhaihay
15 hours ago
Swings & roundabouts, China always successfully prevail.
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@Dhsu4321
18 hours ago
Definitely, China has been preparing for this the last 6 years. China has also been engaging the structure upgrading of the manufacturing from labor intensive industries toward high technology manufacturing.๐คท♂️
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@NURREDIN
2 hours ago
Canada and Mexico need to join BRICS. BRICS countries already have a larger GDP than the G7.They just need to develop a currency like the EURO.
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@lilyinthevalley8046
10 hours ago
Jin should know that this temporary discomfort caused by the property bubble is a way to move the Chinese back to the villages. It is time they need to go back to their home and develop their place of birth and make prosperous lives there. There in these remote places will soon not be so remote. And then, in the future, many big city people will come and join them there because this will happen sooner or later.
All these is preparation for the future and for saving lives.
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@mikekok
21 hours ago
This interviewer was of sub par qlty at fielding questions. 'he should had known china had checkmate Trump way be4 he took office, and to imply China wasn't prepared to handle Trump new tariffs. Rather naive of Farid to harbours such thoughts as ill inform of the latest / current happenings within china but trying to dig dirt wherever 'possible ๐
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@nevertrustsonofman.kingjam5233
9 hours ago
Mighty Dragon ๐ ❤❤❤.
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@lgr2013
18 hours ago
MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN - !
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1 reply
@hendrawarsita5998
21 hours ago
I think China is well prepared of all Trump's tariffs. China developed so much now especially in technology compare to Trump 1.0. Trump shouldn't underestimate China.
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@renzofranco7420
22 hours ago
Assolutamente
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@miltonlai4850
58 minutes ago
IMO, China still has quite a lot options in their tool box, but it is not the good timing to use them. You only need to know China is one of the only few countries that experiencing deflation in recent years, then you will know how much economic flexibility is hidden beneath that.
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@็ซ ้ญไบบ-m3u
8 hours ago
Support mainland China from Taiwan.
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@Ken-pi7qk
14 hours ago
Well I just hope that this desire to diversify its foreign markets means that China will value trade with Australia more and won’t indulge in another bullying trade war against Australia. Let’s see. Power is power whether it’s Chinese or American
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@paulliao9672
15 hours ago
2049 China is no 1 in all areas, I see it believe me.
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@LeeLookhoong
11 hours ago
China is strong as like the great wall
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@edie930
10 hours ago
Farid Zakaria is nuts
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@Macreno3gml
8 hours ago
Beauty with brain
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@rickytan8009
20 hours ago
Yes, absolutely agreed. Chinese are smart and DT has no chance to win.
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@franzMong
2 hours ago
From the long history of China, there is an observation which was summarized into a phrase namely: when a dynasty is going to collapse, usually a a weirdo or a bizarre leader or emperor showed up and lead the country in a strange direction and the dynasty or the empire eventually crumbled. It is fitting that Donald Trump is doing peculiar or strange policies hurting many Americans and antagonizing just about all countries in the world.
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@Andrew-rc3vh
18 hours ago
The extra liquidity you inject has to be balanced by the same level of increase in production. China has been practising supply side economics where the professor is suggesting Keynesian solutions. I think the state's approach has been the right one, although the housing bubble would have been better to deal with before it got to the size it did, which I think the government recognise anyway. An injection of liquidity to boost domestic consumption would be a last resort to counter Trump's attacks. They are not a long term solution. They are just a temporary stabilising thing. Long term China needs to expand its export markets. The growth could come from supplying developing nations.
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@tomjensen618
17 hours ago
No Keyu, we see the dollar strengthening.
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@jamesjz918
14 hours ago (edited)
Well, without higher tariffs. The result is, US consumers buying the products made by China, which in turn help produced jobs in China. While these jobs going to China from America, less people in US are paying taxes due to less job availability. With less tax incomes, US government has less resources to re-invest into internal infrastructure and have to continuously hike income taxes internally. It only promote the internal government budget deficit. So, tariff hikes are necessary if it produces more jobs in US and help reduce average American's tax liability.
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@franksavvy
15 hours ago
The US hyper dependence on cheap labor for significant unsustainable investment flaw , it always has been. Who will we turn towards for another era of exploited labor? Partnerships with India have increased, however, they’re part of BRICS.
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@johnlay3040
13 hours ago
I would like to hear her scenario on the coming battleground in Latin America between the two. Rubio seemed to have scored a point in Panama. Trump got encouraged by the result and had the audacity to say "China will dealt with". Is that a threat or a declaration of war?
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@JL-yt5hy
14 hours ago
Once again, China has caused issues in Serbia, with both the train station and the government facing collapse. Well done. Surely, China is prepared for tariffs—by exaggerating their impact more than ever before. Yes, it's ready.๐คฃ
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@ds-kj8fq
22 hours ago
interesting
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@emeralddragonflystudio2475
19 hours ago
Paper Tiger. They wish they were ready.
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@JohnSmith-xx9th
12 hours ago
Of course there will be a trade deficit. The US consumes like no other. Almost 70% of their economy is based on consumer spending. Go figure
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@jamesn7305
19 hours ago
Maybe it creates opportunities for a second market. Not a bad thing. 2nd global currency, new trade deals that aren't US centric
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@guangxidavidliu
17 hours ago
The problem is LOW tech jobs are disappearing which can be easily solved.
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@meggrobi
4 minutes ago
If China has economic problem they are still growing about twice the US, so what does that say about US economy?
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@Elephant_King_Gj
20 hours ago
There are so many things she's not showing consideration or contemplating in this video. Her guess at the future is a preferred belief for China partisans.
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@ChrisHereToday
20 hours ago
American are already paying more at the store, and prices will go up again.....
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@johns512
19 hours ago
Engage with Chinese mercantilism at your own risk. The USA is better off without China and will prosper by bringing supply chains home. China is way more dependent on trade than the USA, by a factor of 2 at a minimum.
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@Arcy0429
2 hours ago
Here's hoping Fareed Zakaria learned something from Professor Keyu Jin.
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@xingjunDu
19 hours ago
In order to protect China's most powerful AI talents, the Chinese government has taken [special protection] measures: During the Spring Festival visit to relatives, the government deployed 30 special police to protect Liang Wenfeng, the master of DeepSeek, and prohibited non-local people from entering the residential area! I hope the government will not take it lightly, [it should also provide special protection and strong financial support to other relevant personnel (American politicians have proposed the idea of poaching people: if one million US dollars cannot be poached, then 10 million, 50 million...)] - To avoid the Meng Wanzhou incident or assassination - Americans' shamelessness has no limit, only more shamelessness!
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@devendraangbo5830
17 hours ago
Hagemonism must end
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@omgorganicmongoliangrill5790
15 hours ago
China makes things 10 times cheaper. So even 100% tariffs just make it 5 times cheaper ๐๐๐. China just pretending tariffs are bad and they consider this no need to go further which it might be. For China 10% additional tariffs not so presume but they can show disappointed face anyway๐๐๐
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@rogerchan6368
19 hours ago
Re Kishore re Kissinger:
US has no long term grand strategy.
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@bobevans9996
11 hours ago
chinese provinces can trade among themselves - no need for usa or anyone else
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@tonypayne8182
4 minutes ago
To the question is China better prepared for a tariff war with the USA, than the USA is with China, the simple answer is yes. Why is the better question, so some thoughts on that, so let's look at GDP since this is a buzz word we often hear in media, the GDP of the USA is driven by finance and not manufacturing, and China is the direct opposite, and since a manufacturing driven GDP is better, Chine wins that part of the war, next if we look at trade currencies, meaning another form of control used to force others to the will of those that possess that power then the USA wins over China, however the weakness of that power is that to maintain that power it has to be based on a debt, and a debt power is only good if those you use that power on can pay the debt, and tariffs over inflate that power and under inflate those paying that debt with tariffs, high tariffs a declining factor in that same power, so to a point that power works, but after a point it normally forces a country to find a better way, and to add to that point the USA bubble on the currency power is over valued at its highest point since it gained that power after WW2, and is no longer backed by a gold reserve so if it fails it would cause inflation in the thousand percents, or simple put crash the world's economy. So, with the USA stock market bubble, and its currencies bubble, on its on able to cause major damage to the USA a tariff war is not in the best interest of the USA. with this short answer I did not even touch on how governance policy's put chine in a better position.
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@LeonLKC
20 hours ago
Beijing has a lot of options on the table. The U.S. may not be aware, except the China's dominance in rare earth elements, gallium and germanium, tungsten, antimony etc. And U.S. President is certainly aware of these dominance and that Trump was already looking to Ukraine for rare earth elements supplies.
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@swapansinha5717
20 hours ago
Trump will be falling in big trouble. If he does not change his attitude.....
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@Kur01T3nh1
11 hours ago
What re-ignite? It's already there, Trump is just adding more fuel.
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@adder88
9 hours ago
I bet on China winning.
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@BBme
16 hours ago
but today china imposed BS tax to coal. US only export 7% of coal to china!
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@tommywells9351
20 hours ago
Dhe just spoke on that thos guy
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@harbinger6562
14 hours ago
Thank You Prof Keyu ๐จ๐ณ is a Awesome Nation should just claim the jealousy and failure in policy and not make up false reasoning against to make Selves feel better in their admittance in trying to contain from their own jealousy ♥️๐จ๐ณ๐ท๐บ๐๐๐๐ฆพ๐๐น
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@hashimthedream3581
18 hours ago
Interesting, and what happens when American companies no longer have access to inexpensive high-quality products from China. Elon does not make the BEST EV's. Why do Americans have to settle for inferior product made in America?
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1 reply
@lilypang7590
14 hours ago
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
1
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@1zamboni
15 hours ago
With higher employ and internal economic downturn how long can CCP sustain the pressure?
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@victorsvoice7978
13 hours ago
Many nations will join BRICS grouping.
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@GoodbyeUSA-m9l
19 hours ago
The question is....But at what cost to usa to its economy n influence
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@Jshadow121
15 hours ago
Dude must be getting some of the 1.6 Billion Dollar propaganda money. Jin is too nice, in explaining this all to him.
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@dtBanana
1 hour ago
She is not so knowledgeable about China as she wants to projected her! I would like to hear her comment about the imf data of 4.8% growth for China in 2024! It is way way higher than all the G7 countries! Is 4.8% not good enough for a maturing economy?
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@ujohnmike2293
7 hours ago
XJP mistakenly had tried to 'appeace' Trump by a 'grand' grandiose welcome when Trump (smartly) visited China - calculating Beijing (move), here.
In fact, it had emboldened Trump here (after his pretentious 'friendly' visit) and (gain self gratification) being accorded such a highly grand welcome by XJP or Beijing.
XJP or Beijing should hv learnt a great lesson here - about ('rascal') Trump here.
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@kennyyi277
16 hours ago
Professor Jin does not know what she is talking about with regards to the Chinese debt problem. She makes a lot of generalization on the Chinese economy. The debt problem are mostly incurred by the real estate company. The reason why the Chinese government took down the real estate company was to diversify the economy from reliance on real estate and rely on high technology and high end manufacturing for growth. She even agree with the stupid host that the Chinese economy is slowing down with a 5% annual growth? What discipline is she a professional in??
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1 reply
@chinathesideyoudontsee8157
18 hours ago
China plays GO and the U.S checkers !
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1 reply
@tommywells9351
20 hours ago
The USA needs to fixs roads and bridges maybe one or two highspeed rails am not talking about the crime dominated Subway system look around at china and look at the USA a 5year old could tell you who is get to
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@benc6909
20 hours ago
She's smart but not sure if XJP can listen any of the smart advice.
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@WabuhWabuh
11 hours ago
her facial gestures & posture..disgraceful...
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@krishnamaya100
20 hours ago
Yes.china is an ancient civilisation.they are much much matured and experienced than many other countries. It’s a country believes in hard work for the entire society rather than individual gains.very disciplined culture.they may have great plans for at least Mr.Trump ๐
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@pranbharti8682
8 hours ago
❤ China
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@feechoongkok3470
7 hours ago
China.is.
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@respond1984
15 hours ago
Gay fareed is getting desperate….
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@Likeqiang20
21 hours ago
Xinjiang is great. The Uyghurs are free to practise their religion
Except every mosque is permanently closed
And People's Armed Police with automatic weapons
In every street corner.
This is for anyone who hasnt visited ๐๐๐๐
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1 reply
@MauritiusMoments
22 hours ago
Aweful hard cuts in the enditing of the intro
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@ๅ้ไธ็-z7f
16 hours ago
่ฟๅฅณไบบๆค็ๅผ็ผ็่กจๆ
็้พ็
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@็ดซ่ค-u1l
17 hours ago
ๅฅนๆฒกๅๅฆ็่ตทๆฅ่่ๅพๅค。ๅฎ้
ๅนด้พๆ่ฎธๆฏๆๆณ่ฑกๆฅๅพๅคง。
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@SergeyKos-b2i
17 hours ago
I am at the beginning of my "investment journey", planning to put 385K into dividend stocks so that I will be making up to 30% annually in dividend returns. any good stock recommendation on great performing stocks or Crypto will be appreciated!!!
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7 replies
@Dhsu4321
19 hours ago
He is getting old.๐คท♂️
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@ross-sy7rh
22 hours ago
She is scrambling. Trying to find purpose. Good Luck snack woman!
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1 reply
@ahchoooo
18 hours ago
Isn't that obvious? ๐
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@badarmohi-ud-din8813
12 hours ago
Bull's eye
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@angusmckenzie9622
21 hours ago
If China is so prepared for tariffs, why the whinges, complaints and threats ? It’s no coincidence that increased protection of US IP occurs at the same time as China’s failing economy.
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@suzannesuzanne8947
19 hours ago
@shadowyt3384 two very short sentences and you couldn't even get them grammatically right!๐คญ๐
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@Likeqiang20
22 hours ago
Central govt can simply subsidise exporters indefinitely
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@Likeqiang20
22 hours ago
Wumaos laught at US putting tariff on imports because it hurts consumers
Well, china just put tariffs on imports too. Who is laugh at the govt? ๐๐๐๐
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@Likeqiang20
22 hours ago
Why are lottery shops closing? I had to drive to multiple places just to buy a lottery ticket.
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1 reply
@Likeqiang20
22 hours ago
Economy is collapsing. Evergrande has gone to zero. 10m construction workers have lost their jobs. Home prices have dropped 70%. Shops are closing up, commercial rents have collapsed too. Two million restaurants closed in 2024 after 1.5m closed in 2023 . Youth unemployment is 27%. Middle age unemployment is pushing 50%. Jobs are evaporating, housing debt is crushing and birth rate has collapsed. Local govt has no money to pay workers. Public debt is 130 trillion. Chinese 30 year bonds yield now lower than Japan. 2000 hospitals closed since covid, 500 in 2024. 600m earns 1000 yuan or less. The govt hospitals has no money to buy imported medicine, replaced with generic low quality locally made products, patients welfare is not a concern.
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@JcBautista01
13 hours ago
If you see the faces of these two characters their faces say it all. If you frawn a lot that shows how insecure, concerned and angry you can be because of lack of knowledge which exposes some degree of ignorance by choice but knowing the real truth.
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@shadowyt3384
21 hours ago
She hate Xi. But Xi like her๐๐๐๐คญ๐
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@xufangbai546
16 hours ago
I wish all the people can live together peacefully. At this moment, Americans have more to worry about. https://youtu.be/hG579CUymTU?si=pcFN_65-G6rYX777
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@MichaelNielsen-q6w
16 hours ago
Yes
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