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    us-china trade war

    Explore "us-china trade war" with insightful episodes like "U.S.-China Trade Tensions and Tariffs: Your Questions Answered", "How a Second Trump Administration Could Upend US-China Relations", "Dan Wang on China's Mission to Be a World Leader in Semiconductors", "US election programming note" and "This Is What A Trade War With China Would Actually Look Like" from podcasts like ""WSJ What’s News", "Odd Lots", "Odd Lots", "Behind the Money" and "Odd Lots"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    U.S.-China Trade Tensions and Tariffs: Your Questions Answered

    U.S.-China Trade Tensions and Tariffs: Your Questions Answered
    As the 2024 presidential election race heats up, the U.S. trade fight with China is increasingly becoming front-and-center. Last week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, as both President Biden and former President Donald Trump call for more trade restrictions on China, and Beijing hits some U.S. imports with new levies. WSJ reporter Andy Duehren, who covers the Treasury Department and economic policy, and chief China correspondent Lingling Wei answer listener questions on how the U.S.-China trade fight might affect you, your business and the broader economy. Luke Vargas hosts. Further Reading Biden Calls for Steep Hike to Tariff on Chinese Steel  China Exports Rise as Trade Tensions Mount  A China-U.S. Decoupling? You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet  Biden Admin Explores Raising Tariffs on Chinese EVs  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    How a Second Trump Administration Could Upend US-China Relations

    How a Second Trump Administration Could Upend US-China Relations

     Back in 2016, Donald Trump campaigned on a platform that included a much harsher stance toward trade with China, and the US-China Trade War was a big deal while he was in office. But the Biden administration has quietly continued the Trump tariff regime and even enacted more stringent restrictions targeting China's use of technology, including on semiconductors. Now that Trump looks set to get the Republican presidential nomination again, he's suggesting even higher tariffs — of 60% or more — on Chinese goods. What effect would that actually have on the US economy and global trade? Would it lead to higher prices for Americans when the country is still struggling with inflation? Or would it result in a slowing of the economy that actually mutes prices? Would US domestic manufacturing ramp up to fill the gap? Or would we simply import more from other countries? In this episode, we speak with Tom Orlik, chief economist at Bloomberg Economics, and Mackenzie Hawkins, US industrial policy reporter for Bloomberg News, who have published an in-depth analysis of the impact of these potential tariffs.

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    Dan Wang on China's Mission to Be a World Leader in Semiconductors

    Dan Wang on China's Mission to Be a World Leader in Semiconductors

    We've been talking a lot on the podcast about semiconductors. The stumble of Intel. The general troubles with US manufacturing, and, of course, the rise of TSMC. But, for a long time, the Chinese government has endeavored to build a successful homegrown and world-leading chip industry. On this episode, we speak with Dan Wang, a tech analyst at Gavekal Dragonomics. He discusses the state of the domestic industry, as well as broader lessons on Chinese tech and business after a year of extraordinary disruption.

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    This Is What A Trade War With China Would Actually Look Like

    This Is What A Trade War With China Would Actually Look Like

    Recent threats to impose tariffs on Chinese goods, coupled with China's own retaliatory announcements have raised the prospects of a trade war between the world's two biggest economies. But what is a trade war, and what would be the economic ramifications if there were one? Brad Setser, the Steven A. Tananbaum senior fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, joins us on this week’s Odd Lots to help answer those questions. Brad has been writing about trade issues for many years, and explains what exactly we're seeing now, how the current trade actions differ from standard moves on trade, and where ultimately all these actions might go. 

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