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China

Trump’s final campaign push touts his China trade policy—but his signature deal isn’t delivering what it promised

Grady McGregor
By
Grady McGregor
Grady McGregor
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Grady McGregor
By
Grady McGregor
Grady McGregor
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 28, 2020, 6:30 AM ET

U.S. President Donald Trump is running for reelection, in part, on the idea that his aggressive trade policy with China has been a boon to the United States.

“It’s probably the No. 1 reason I’m standing here, because of trade, and have we turned that around,” Trump said at a rally in Michigan on Tuesday. “I put big fat, beautiful tariffs on China. We took in tens of billions of dollars,” he said later. (In fact, the money the U.S. Treasury took in from tariffs was paid by U.S. Importers of Chinese goods.)

New data, however, suggests that the U.S. Has so far failed to reap the full benefits of Trump’s signature trade deal with China. What’s more, the issue is not a top concern for U.S. Voters.

The last tranche of U.S.-China trade data to publish before the 2020 U.S. Presidential election on Nov. 3 shows that China is not on pace to meet the terms of the phase 1 trade deal the Trump administration signed 10 months ago.

In January, the U.S. And China took the first step to end a yearslong trade war, with China agreeing to buy $200 billion more of U.S. Goods in 2020 and 2021 in exchange for relaxed U.S. Tariffs.

Through September, China had imported roughly 53% of what it should have bought to be on track to meet the deal’s 2020 targets, according to the Peterson Institute for International Economics’ (PIIE) trade deal tracker.

“The evidence indicates that the deal is failing to live up to Trump’s pledge,” senior fellow for PIIE Chad Bown wrote on Tuesday. “No single reason explains why China has not met the phase 1 goals. The COVID-19 pandemic did initially knock China’s economy on its heels, but its trade has recovered faster than most. And some U.S. Exports to China—including medical supplies, pork, and semiconductors—actually accelerated in 2020.”

After the election, Bown wrote, “the United States needs a new approach to address its trade concerns with China.”

Importance to voter s

The latest figures undercut Trump’s boasts about his record on trade, but even his inflated claims may not resonate with voters. Surveys show that trade policy ranks low when it comes to the issues voters care most about.

In a 2016 preelection poll of registered voters, 57% of respondents said trade policy was “very important” to their choice of presidential candidate, according to the Pew Research Center. Still, it ranked 11th on a list of 14 issues pollsters asked about. Likewise, a 2016 Gallup poll found that trade policy didn’t rank as one of the top 10 most important issues for Republicans, Independents, or Democrats in choosing a presidential candidate.

Again this year, trade policy is not a top concern for U.S. Voters. In January 2020, a Gallup poll found that voters ranked the U.S.’s “trade policy with other nations” 15th on a list of the 16 most important issues in the presidential election.

But in recent months, perhaps because of the pandemic, public support for a more aggressive U.S. Trade relationship with Beijing seems to be growing, even if it isn’t top of mind at the ballot box.

In June 2020, Morning Consult found that 39% of voters believed that U.S. Tariffs on Chinese exports would help the U.S. Economy, while 38% said the tariffs would hurt it. In the same poll from May 2019, 36% of voters believed U.S. Tariffs on Chinese exports would help the U.S. Economy as opposed to 44% who said they would hurt the U.S.

Competing claims

Even though voters have more pressing concerns, Trump and Biden continue to relitigate Trump’s trade policies as they make their final appeals.

On CBS’s 60 Minutes, Biden blasted Trump for increasing the U.S.’s. Deficit with China.

“We have a trade deficit that’s larger with China than when we were there,” Biden told 60 Minutes on Sunday, referring to the Obama presidency.

The U.S.’s trade deficit with China from 1985 to 2019, in U.S. Dollars.
USTR

Biden made a similar claim in a September debate with Trump, and, as Coins2Day previously reported, it’s at least partly true. The U.S.’s trade deficit continued to balloon in Trump’s first few years in office but has since returned to roughly Obama-era levels.

Meanwhile, Trump said at the rally that if reelected he will help the U.S. End its “reliance on China once and for all.”

In order to do so, the U.S. May need to start from square one in trade negotiations with China.

“[The phase 1 trade deal] did very little to tackle the major trade issues the United States has with China,” the PIIE’s Bown writes. “No matter who is President, the United States needs to get China to liberalize its tariffs, remove nontariff barriers, and rationalize its subsidies and other practices that distort economic incentives.”

About the Author
Grady McGregor
By Grady McGregor
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