US-China Cooperation in a Changing Global Economy

SendTime:2020-07-22 20:03:00
Introduction:
Author:

The Trump administration's emphasis on "America First" would significantly affect US-China trade and investment, which in turn would affect both countries' economic performance and global roles (but might not change balance of payments so important to President Trump). The bilateral exchange rate as a rebalancing mechanism would thus remain a focus of China-US negotiations if not conflict. The US government's proposed tax overhaul, plans for infrastructure investment and financial deregulation, and the corresponding adjustment of the US Federal Reserve's monetary policy will also have spillover effects on China and the world economy. In this joint report, scholars from the China Finance 40 Forum (CF40) and the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) identify ongoing areas of common economic interest for Chinese and American governments, practical ways that the two governments might work together on economic issues, and what is at risk if the Trump administration attacks the rules-based international economic system—which the United States created and which has been essential to both US and Chinese prosperity for decades.

Contents:

I. Overview

1. Creating a Basis for China-US Economic Cooperation under the New US Administration

   Adam S. Posen and Jiming Ha

II. Impact of Policy Changes

2. Prospects for Changes in US Fiscal Policy and Their Effects on the US Economy

   Karen Dynan

3. What Is the Potential Growth Rate of the US Economy, and How Might Policy Affect It?

   Jason Furman

4. Impact of Trump Administration’s Proposed Policies on the United States and China

   Jiming Ha

III. Exchange Rates and Finance

5. Exchange Rates and the International Monetary System: Not a Scapegoat

  Guan Tao, Lu Zhengwei, and Guo Jiayi

6. A Stability-Oriented Exchange Rate Policy for China

  Joseph E. Gagnon

7. The United States at a Crossroads: G-20 Cooperation and the International Financial Architecture

  Nathan Sheets

8. Thoughts on Overindebtedness from a European Perspective

  Nicolas Véron and Jeromin Zettelmeyer

IV. Trade and Investment

9. US-China Trade Disputes and the World Trade Organization

   Chad P. Bown

10. The Importance of Doing Our BIT: The Economic Potential of a US-China Bilateral Investment Treaty

   Lee Branstetter, Britta Glennon, and J. Bradford Jensen

11. China-US Bilateral Investment

   Guo Kai, Wang Bijun, and Yang Yuanchen

12. Foreign Direct Investment in China

   Zixuan Huang

13. State Resurgence in China

   Nicholas Lardy

14. The Risks and Costs of Trade Wars

   Marc Noland

15. Asia-Pacific Regionalism after the Trans-Pacific Partnership

   Jeffrey J. Schott and Zhiyao Lu

16. Trade Cooperation and Conflicts between the United States and China: Risks and Realities

   Fan Zhai

For full document:

https://www.piie.com/system/files/documents/piieb17-1.pdf