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Michael's avatar

In the closing section, the author wrote: "...unless we understand our own system, we risk building policy on assumptions—and feeling the shock long before our rivals do.This isn’t about backing down. It’s about matching strategy to structure. And making sure the system that leads also knows how to carry the weight." A valid observation, I think.

My question: Is there anyone in the current administration capable of thinking along these lines?

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Sri Hari's avatar

The US and China need to grasp that hegemony has limits in world trade. American hegemony over the world's financial architecture gave it free money to buy anything it wished without fear of debt overhang. The Chinese pretended the US debt to be real money and the US market to be everlasting, creating a hegemonic manufacturing system that overwhelmed manufacturing in every other nation.

Both hegemonic systems served each other very well until the US piled debt, which it could never pay back, and China produced goods in far greater volume than it could consume.

However, for world trade to be sustainable, the world needs fairness, not hegemony.

The US currency must lose its prime reserve currency status and become a part of a basket of currencies. China needs to move a significant number of production operations to countries where consumption occurs.

Until then, this US/China trade war will continue.

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