Trump to Take 'Tough Line' on US-China Trade Relations, Likely to Kill TPP

© AP Photo / Jae C. HongDonald Trump (File)
Donald Trump (File) - Sputnik International
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Donald Trump, who won the US presidential elections, will take a hard line on trade relations with China and is likely to abandon the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) treaty, experts told Sputnik on Wednesday.

Trump's Hard Line on Trade Relations With China

"I think DT [Donald Trump] would take a tough line on trade with China. HC [Hillary Clinton] would not," Dr. Gregory Moore, the head of School of International Studies at the University of Nottingham Ningbo China, said.

Moore’s view was supported by Vice Dean of the Institute of International Affairs at China’s Fudan University Shen Dingli, who said that Trump’s rhetoric on trade relations with China would not be appreciated by Beijing.

A man checks his smartphone beside cardboard cutouts of U.S. presidential candidates Hillary Clinton (L) and Donald Trump, at an event held by the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong, China November 9, 2016. - Sputnik International
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At the same time, he said China and the United States could "use a third-party mechanism, for example, the World Trade Organization (WTO) arbitration, which has been used many times before to settle such trade disputes," Dingli said.

In 2015, Trump stressed in an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal that China was a "currency manipulator" and promised to trigger "a series of actions that will start the process of imposing countervailing duties on cheap Chinese imports."

China currently ranks as the United States’ second largest trading partner. The multilateral TPP trade agreement has been characterized by the outgoing US President Barack Obama administration as a way to impose US trade and labor standards in the Asia Pacific, where China maintains strong economic influence.

TPP 'Probably Dead' After Trump's Victory

"With DT, yes, the TPP is probably dead. With HC, I think in her heart she believes in it, but has to suppress support for it because of the leftists in the US she seeks to win support," Moore said.

Thousands of people demonstrate against the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) and the EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) in the centre of Brussels, Belgium September 20, 2016 - Sputnik International
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In June, the new US presidential-elect said in his jobs plan speech, posted on the Politico website, that TPP would be "the death blow for American manufacturing," namely by making it easier for US trading competitors to ship cheap subsidized goods into the country’s markets and allowing other states to "put barriers in front of the US exports." He said that there was "no way to fix it [the treaty]."

The TPP would link the United States with the economies of 11 other Pacific Rim nations in a trade zone with lower tariffs and fewer import restrictions. Critics of the TPP agreement claim it undermines domestic companies, laws, regulations and institutions through an extra-judicial process that stacks the deck in favor of multinational corporations.

Trump to Withdraw US Forces From Asia-Pacific

Besides Trump’s rough rhetoric on trade relations with China, there is actually one aspect in his policy toward the Asia-Pacific region, which may have a positive effect on bilateral relations of Washington and Beijing.

"Trump’s victory in the US presidential election means that the US military forces are more likely to leave the Asia-Pacific region, and this is what China would prefer to see," Dingli said.

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and his running mate Mike Pence address their election night rally in Manhattan, New York, U.S., November 9, 2016 - Sputnik International
Japan to Work With Trump to Promote Peace in Asia-Pacific
According to The Washington Post, when asked whether he would withdraw US forces from South Korea and Japan if they did not increase their payments to cover costs of US troops, Trump said that he would be willing to do it as the United States "cannot afford to be losing vast amounts of billions of dollars on all of this."

The United States has numerous military bases in South Korea and Japan — 28,000 and 54,500 troops in each country, respectively, in order to guard against the threat of North Korea and keep watch on China. The strategy of "rebalancing" was said to be a key priority of the Obama administration toward the Asia-Pacific region.

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