China's decision to slap an additional 25 percent tariff on 659 types of U.S. goods worth $50 billion should remind the U.S. government that a trade war that it has initiated has a price tag.
China imposed the tariff on U.S. goods such as agricultural products, auto and aquatic products right immediately after the Trump administration announced on Friday tariffs on $50 billion worth Chinese goods. Beijing's quick reaction is an unequivocal manifestation of its determination to safeguard its legitimate interests and fight protectionism.
The White House's tariff decision is a stark violation of the core spirit of consensus reached in recent China-U.S. trade talks and is set to backfire if Washington does not back off from its dangerous adventurism.
The two sides have achieved substantial results in the recent three rounds of negotiations in Washington and Beijing, and there have been promising signs of improving trade relations despite the difficulty to entirely iron out their trade differences in the short term.
The Trump administration's abrupt turn to tariffs, however, has served as declaration of trade war against China and once again betrays its tumultuous, unilateral and willful decision-making style, which is set to undermine normal trade relations between the world's two biggest economies.
What the U.S. should bear in mind is that its unilateral moves will lead to nothing but resolute fighting back from its trade partners, as indicated by China's imposition of tariffs on imported U.S. goods.
Given the frequent flip-flopping of President Donald Trump's administration, it is still too early to conclude a full-blown war will be underway. But China's stance has been consistent: It welcomes dialogue but is not afraid of a trade war. It will not sit idle allowing its core interests to be damaged by any unilateral and protectionist move of any trade partner. The U.S. should not underestimate China's resoluteness in safeguarding its national interest.
And Washington should be responsible for the nullification of previous economic and trade outcomes between the two countries.
China as the world's second-largest economy and the largest consumer market has announced and taken substantial moves to further open its economy, which will provide development opportunities for all countries, including the U.S.. It will be regrettable if U.S. companies and workers fail to benefit from China's economic liberalization moves due to Washington's refusal to cast away its adventurism.
Facing the substantial damage of the U.S. unilateralism and protectionism, the world's major economies, such as China and Europe, should join hands to fight back to teach the U.S. a lesson that it must pay a dear price if it stubbornly sticks to its own way regardless of the interests of other countries.