1. The US since I was a child protected their farmers with trade subsidies making it harder for ours to compete in, wait for it.. The Chinese market. So I find it hypocritical of the US or those supporting their arguments (and you are obviously arguing for them despite that you are Canadian) to cry foul at China doing the same thing.Ma Deuce wrote:
I never slammed their "uncompetitive practices" in and of themselves: They're obviously in China's best interest so it behooves them to have them. What I do condemn is their insistence on "having their cake and eating it too", that is keeping these measures in place while at the same time expecting us to grant them completely unfettered access to our markets (which we currently do for the most part). Every time a first-world country erects some barrier to Chinese goods they scream bloody murder and either retaliate or run to the WTO, even though these barriers are often temporary and less severe than the ones the Chinese already have in place. Fuck, they even have an army of Washington lobbyists on their payroll to pressure the US government to retain trade agreements favorable to China (think Israel is the only country who does this?). The double standard you just accused me of is in fact the one by which China is guilty.
Even so, I admit it may still be necessary to have some tariffs in place in light of China's natural cost advantages which are impossible to offset any other way, even if China did not have any direct barriers in return. Even in that scenario I don't see why it's unreasonable for a national government to level the playing field in favor of it's own producers if the alternative is watching them be exterminated by cheap imports in their home market. If the Chinese can't accept that rationale, then that's their problem and they can do whatever they want about it.
2. The double standard accusation is 100% accurate when you have just admitted you want protectionist measures in place even if China has none. Pointing out China also has the same double standards is a tu quoque fallacy.