excerpt from SCMP

*What Trump’s trade war with China would look like*

For all the huffing and puffing, it’s good first to remember that we’ve
actually been here before.

New presidents always come into office promising to get tough on China’s
unfair trade practices, usually after making pledges to working class
constituencies in rust belt states like Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan.
President George W. Bush imposed 30 per cent tariffs on imported steel in
2002, a sop to the steelworkers union, but got slapped back by the World
Trade Organisation the following year. President Barack Obama, following
through on a pledge to his autoworker supporters, in 2009 imposed tariffs
on Chinese imported tyres, 35 per cent the first year and 30 per cent the
second year.

*US President Barack Obama took on the Chinese tyre industry. *

The Obama tyre tariffs are instructive because they illustrate the Chinese
government’s keen instinct for finding just the right retaliatory target.
In that case, China chose American chicken feet, accusing US poultry
farmers of dumping the paws onto the Chinese market. Suddenly plump juicy
chicken feet imported from America – a trade worth some US$278 million in
2009 – virtually collapsed. By 2011, America’s poultry farmers had lost an
estimated US$1 billion in business and were crying foul.

*Locked and loaded, China and the US are heading into a trade war
<http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/2132598/locked-and-loaded-china-and-us-are-heading-trade-war>*

So China’s trade officials recognise that a well-targeted retaliatory
strike, particularly in the agriculture sector where the US actually enjoys
a surplus with China, is far more effective than carpet bombing in a
full-fledged trade war. That is what makes the choice of sorghum wickedly
ingenious.

The US now sends China about US$1billon a year worth of sorghum, the grain
used to make gut-busting baiju alcohol. And in the US, much of the sorghum
comes from places like Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma – all states handily won
by Trump in the 2016 election. It’s almost as if the Chinese leadership
keeps a 2016 electoral college map pinned to the wall in Zhongnanhai.
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