The Trump administration is investigating Chinese trade practices
Problems will be easier to find than solutions
BEING tough on China was a constant theme of President Donald Trump’s election campaign. On August 14th he had another chance to wield his presidential pen to show that he is making good on his promises—in this case of a “zero-tolerance policy on intellectual-property theft and forced technology transfer”. With the cameras rolling, he formally instructed Robert Lighthizer, the United States Trade Representative, to consider launching an investigation into China’s alleged crimes. “This is just the beginning,” was Mr Trump’s final flourish for the news bulletins.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Lighthizer, camera, action!”
Finance & economics August 19th 2017
- The North American Free-Trade Agreement renegotiation begins
- The Trump administration is investigating Chinese trade practices
- China modernises its monetary policy
- The Catholic church becomes an impact investor
- Hedge funds try to promote sports betting as an asset class
- A firm that shares a name with its founder earns higher profits
- Why Africa’s development model puzzles economists
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