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Poll -- Who will cave first in the momentous China-USA trade war?

Trade war to end all trade wars 101 members have voted

  1. 1. Who will cave first in the momentous China-USA trade war?

    • China will cave first
      16%
      15
    • USA will cave first
      65%
      58
    • Neither side will cave
      17%
      16

Please sign in or register to vote in this poll.

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  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, KhunLA said:

image.png.5f9397318cb7bdb65025fda99a0fedb6.png

 

 

 All that plus China has a nuclear option. 

 

Robin Brooks, senior fellow Brookings. 

 

If China embarked on a mass sale of its US treasuries, the value of the debt would plunge and yields would soar. This would drive up US government borrowing costs and hammer the public finances in a highly destabilising move.

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  • BangkokReady
    BangkokReady

    Obviously Trump will be successful and China will cave.  Trump is a master strategist and China is in the far weaker position.

  • China of course, if Xi doesn’t come forward then China’s economy will collapse and Xi will be out.

  • Through your prism any success of Trump is bad, the same mentality with the border issue…the left will always do the exact opposite for the sake of spite opposed to any good, is why the left is a heap

Posted Images

  • Popular Post

Happy flip day!

Now wait for the flop day?

Today?Tomorrow? or in 90 days?

Anyway a great foundation to plan your business on.

Win! but whom?

  • Popular Post

POTUS will cave first, when prices at places MAGAs shop, like Walmart, double.

 

He either caved last night, or else he and his buddies played the market for personal gain.

 

China can start unloading its UST holdings, as well as "nationalize" US investments in China, which will have POTUS' phone ringing off the hook from angry CEOs.

 

China holds the cards.

 

By the way, isn't it sweet of POTUS to sign that EO yesterday authorizing him to prosecute critics? What is Free Speech when you have lese majeste laws by decree.

  • Popular Post

Trump lost the last tariff war with China in his first presidency.

 

The Smoot-Hawley tariffs of 1930 were a prime cause of the Great Depression.

 

Why anyone thinks he can get a different result this time is beyond my comprehension.

  • Popular Post

China has learned its lessons from Trump's first presidency.

 

The Chinese have gradually weaned themselves off of US imports, and found alternative suppliers. They have built their own semi conductor industry, automated many factories to lower costs, and massively increased their gold holdings. No one know how much they hold officially, but they are one of the largest gold producers in the world, and they don't export it.

They have even created their own BRICS payment system due to the US weaponisation of the Dollar.

 

IMHO they are more immune to US actions than vice-versa.

 

 

 

 

  • Popular Post

The US, of course. Xi outclasses Trump by 60 IQ points. And he knows how to negotiate, something Trump is terrible at. China is in a far stronger position. The US has tens of thousands of companies that have spent trillions of dollars on infrastructure to manufacture in China. They simply cannot afford to levy these tariffs long term, it would cripple the US economy. 

 

Trump is a dunce. 

  • Popular Post

The world is backing trade with the US evidenced by a willingness to negotiate. China's economy is dependent on selling to the west and it's biggest market is the US. China will need to find markets to dump it's products. Trump holds the cards IMO. 

  • Author
  • Popular Post

I voted Trump will cave of course.

But if this escalates over time and neither caves then the pushback in the US would result in Trump calling for martial law. That would be his only chance to try to match Xis oppression of his own people 

Teach this miserable sex offender a lesson Big Xi 🤔
 

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  • Popular Post

Do you see a pattern?

img_2_1744267429649.jpg.609e70b480b85fe0c60163e131ee8c48.jpg

  • Popular Post
22 minutes ago, dinsdale said:

The world is backing trade with the US evidenced by a willingness to negotiate. China's economy is dependent on selling to the west and it's biggest market is the US. China will need to find markets to dump it's products. Trump holds the cards IMO. 

China is not negotiating. They will retaliate tit for tat. Total export  to US is only 14.8% of total export. China is prepared to take some pain and will pour more money to stimulate domestic consumption. It would not be a fair fight as the political system favours China. Allies of US are discussing with China for more trade bypassing US. Investments will unlikely to go back to US because of the uncertainty created by Trump. The future is bleak for US for next 4 years and even further forward. 

1 hour ago, Lacessit said:

Trump lost the last tariff war with China in his first presidency.

 

The Smoot-Hawley tariffs of 1930 were a prime cause of the Great Depression.

 

And went on to facilitate much worse.

  • Popular Post

American consumers are about to get a harsh wake-up call: much of the cheap, readily available stuff they’ve come to rely on is about to get significantly more expensive. And globally, there's a growing consensus — the world is learning that Trump's version of America is unpredictable and, frankly, not to be trusted. It has the distinct flavour of end-of-empire decline.

Meanwhile, outside the U.S., the rest of us may actually benefit. As trade relationships shift, many countries can look forward to improved ties with China and a potential influx of affordable goods — the very products that once would have been destined for American shelves. Markets may become more competitive, and prices could drop.

So, in an ironic twist, while the U.S. doubles down on isolationist rhetoric and erratic leadership, the rest of the world might just walk away with the better deal.

Thanks for that, Donald.

 

https://unherd.com/2025/04/china-is-ready-for-battle/

 

Meanwhile, China has a lot of what can be called economic strategic depth. The basic tension in the US/China trade relationship is that the US has been living beyond its means, whereas China has been living well beneath them, repressing wages to keep export prices competitive. Faced with the loss of external markets, the Chinese leadership is now re-orienting the economy towards domestic consumption to pick up the slack, which will lessen the impact of the trade war on ordinary citizens. It thereby has a lot of capacity to absorb lost American sales.

1 hour ago, Eric Loh said:

 All that plus China has a nuclear option. 

 

Robin Brooks, senior fellow Brookings. 

 

If China embarked on a mass sale of its US treasuries, the value of the debt would plunge and yields would soar. This would drive up US government borrowing costs and hammer the public finances in a highly destabilising move.

They’ve quietly been selling them off since the peak in 2013, fully aware that in the event of a war, they could lose everything. The rest will likely be offloaded quietly in due course. America is the world’s biggest debtor nation — it needs borrowed cash just to keep going and if they print because bond auctions fail then they debauch the dollar. It's looking like the bill is coming in from a decades old binge at the global buffet.

  • Popular Post
37 minutes ago, sammieuk1 said:

Teach this miserable sex offender a lesson Big Xi 🤔
 


 

GoG13MuW4AAjCJw.jpg

  • Popular Post

The Chinese will eat grass in order to persevere. Trump and the US will not even follow the law and ban Tik Tok.

America doesn’t have the skills and engineers to build iPhones ,without china they would be using house phones only and antiquated analogue phones

they can’t do it

59 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

China is not negotiating. They will retaliate tit for tat. Total export  to US is only 14.8% of total export. China is prepared to take some pain and will pour more money to stimulate domestic consumption. It would not be a fair fight as the political system favours China. Allies of US are discussing with China for more trade bypassing US. Investments will unlikely to go back to US because of the uncertainty created by Trump. The future is bleak for US for next 4 years and even further forward. 

Pure CCP shill talk.

  • Popular Post
4 minutes ago, dinsdale said:

Pure CCP shill talk.

 

Whistling past the graveyard response.

Confidence in the US economy is plummeting as investors dumped government debt amid growing concerns over the impact of Donald Trump's tariffs.

Governments sell bonds - essentially an IOU - to raise money from financial markets for public spending and in return they pay interest.

The US does not normally see high interest rates on its debt as its bonds are viewed as a safe investment, but on Wednesday rates spiked sharply to touch 4.5%.

The rise came after Trump pressed ahead with sweeping tariffs on goods being imported into the US, while Washington's trade war with China escalated further - although Trump on Wednesday did put a 90-day pause on higher tariffs for some countries.

After the US implemented a 104% tariff on products from China at midnight on Wednesday, Beijing hit back with 84% levy on American products. Trump later raised the tariff on China to 125%.

Stock markets have been falling sharply over the past few days in reaction to the escalating global trade war and fears of tariffs leading to higher prices, although US stocks soared when Trump announced the 90-day pause and a lowered 10% reciprocal tariff for other countries.

However, the sale of bonds in the US poses a major problem for the world's biggest economy.

In China most things are a lie made up by the CCP. From their population figures (probably less than half of what they say), their GDP, questionable quality in some products, cars, planes,  building practices, and on and on... And once a decision is made by Xi there is no turning back (the save face cultural thing). Just like zero COVID, they will keep at it despite being idiotic.

This trade war was a trap, and China took the bait. China retaliated thinking the whole world was going to go with them… The question is… will they continue to try to “save face” and continue (like they did with zero COVID) or will they cave?

Btw- I don’t hate China as a whole. I just don’t agree with the actions of their government.

  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, dinsdale said:

The world is backing trade with the US evidenced by a willingness to negotiate. China's economy is dependent on selling to the west and it's biggest market is the US. China will need to find markets to dump it's products. Trump holds the cards IMO. 

 

Is that still true anymore?  The US is no longer the 'west'.  Trump can only bully his alleged allies so much, sanctions are losing their effectiveness.  Even his European vassals are beginning to show signs of independence.

 

The US only accounts for about 14% of Chinese exports, and that number is quickly dropping.  Can the Chinese shift their exports?

 

I suppose Russia would like to buy combat drones and military equipment.

 

Iran might like to buy a whole fleet of civilian airliners, stealth aircraft, and perhaps a couple nukular subs, which would give them a legitimate use for their 60%-enriched iranium.

 

North Korea could use a couple thousand spy balloons to drop poop on Seoul, for which they could trade mail-order brides.

 

All of Africa needs more investment, more railroads, more highways, more hospitals, more industrial parks providing employment and wages with which to purchase Chinese products.  A nice change from military bases droning wedding parties and regime-changing stable governments.

 

Maybe they'll go ahead and build that alternative to the Panama Canal, and do it with permission of the locals this time.

8 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

Is that still true anymore?  The US is no longer the 'west'.  Trump can only bully his alleged allies so much, sanctions are losing their effectiveness.  Even his European vassals are beginning to show signs of independence.

I think that's the whole point of this... independence. The end of Globalization as we know it.

  • Popular Post
2 minutes ago, JGon said:

I think that's the whole point of this... independence. The end of Globalization as we know it.

 

Globalization will still be here, but Trump will be taking 'merka back to the 1800's, separated from the world economy.

 

We'll have 100% 'merkan production using 100% 'merkan labor with 100% 'merkan components for all our conestoga wagons and buggy whips.

 

Winning!

  • Popular Post
57 minutes ago, dinsdale said:

Pure CCP shill talk.

Keep burrowing down and defending the fool. You soon see that Trump's tariff war is a big ponzi scam for him and his inner circle. 

The U.S. really needs to halve its wage bill if it is to compete against China. The other alternative is for the U.S. to build autonomous plants that do not require labor. Either way, a lot of people will be upset.

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