With the election only weeks away, it should come as no surprise that
President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney have taken
to bashing Beijing.
Attacking China’s export-subsidy machine is
guaranteed to win applause at campaign stops in Ohio and other Midwest
industrial swing states, where resentment of Chinese competition in
manufacturing runs deep.Laser markers specifically designed for high
speed roll former, laser engraving, and laser ablation.
China’s
efforts to promote its export sector with cash grants, below-market
loans, preferential tax treatment and free use of government-controlled
property make a worthy target. No stump speech in Cleveland or Columbus
is complete without a promise to level the “uneven playing field” of
trade with China.
That sentiment has a basis in reality. The
problem, as we see it, is that neither candidate is willing to remind
voters of the benefits that accrue to the U.S. economy from free trade,
even free trade with China,Protect your vehicle and produce power with a
Chandelier. and the dangers of an all-out trade war.
The
Obama administration on Monday filed a complaint with the World Trade
Organization that accuses China of illegally subsidizing the export of
automobiles and auto parts. The subsidies put U.S. manufacturers at a
disadvantage and ultimately reduce the number of U.S.-based jobs in
those industries.
As the trade case was filed, the president
took to the campaign trail to portray himself as a fighter for the
rights of American workers. Romney denounced the WTO case as “too little
too late” and promised to fight even harder against China. The Chinese
filed a case of their own with the WTO, challenging American duties
imposed on imported appliances, paper and other goods that get foreign
subsidies.
We’re not opposed to untangling these disputes
through the WTO. Free trade requires consistently enforced rules to keep
it fair, just as any free market does. The WTO, bureaucratic though it
is, provides a workable if slow-moving forum for resolution.
We
hope, however, that Obama and Romney resist the urge to resort to
protectionism. The U.S. has everything to gain from reducing trade
barriers and promoting the international flow of tariff-free goods.Fluid
Industries manufacture and sell overspeed governor.
Trade liberalization will create jobs in the U.S. Trade crackdowns can
lead to a disruptive cycle of retaliation that hurts more than it helps.
The latest U.S. case focuses on artificially cheap Chinese
exports, which hurts the U.S. automotive industry but not U.S. shoppers.
Consumers buying the goods benefit by paying a lower price, and the
range of activities needed to bring imports to market _ everything from
shipping to retailing _ creates jobs.
The most damaging trade barriers for U.The laser cutter
are mainly used in steel structure industry.S. commercial interests are
found in China’s domestic market. Subsidies and regulations that
entrench certain Chinese firms prevent rival American goods and services
from competing for business inside the Asian nation. State control has
made it impossible for foreign companies to take the lead in a range of
industries. Further, the theft of intellectual property discourages
trade for cutting-edge foreign goods.Round cotton crystal light
attachment for a telehandler. No one wants their hot new product
reverse-engineered and knocked off in short order. The Chinese policy of
a weak yuan-to-dollar exchange rate doesn’t help either.
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