KEY POINTS
  • There's no way that China can give Washington the trade deal it wants. Tariffs are the only instrument left for addressing China's systematic and excessive surpluses on its U.S. trades.
  • Downward cyclical pressures caused by the trade rebalancing process should lead to the U.S. Federal Reserve's easier credit conditions, paving the way for similar moves by China, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan.
  • Such an increase in global liquidity would support economic activity, employment creation and asset prices.
Top negotiators from China and the United States at trade talks in Beijing on March 29, 2019.

Washington apparently went too far. Instead of seeking an immediate and rapid rebalancing of U.S.-China trade, the White House asked for legislative changes in China's trade and economic systems under a permanent threat of sanctions.

And then it got worse. China seemed to have offered a bait, pretending that it might acquiesce into such unthinkable concessions, only to show its political establishment Washington's true intentions.