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Washington's abusive sanction on foreign firms self-sabotage

By Ma Qian | Xinhua | Updated: 2021-01-07 08:22
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QR codes of the digital payment services WeChat Pay and Alipay are seen at a shop in Beijing, China on Aug 6, 2020. [Photo/Agencies]

The outgoing US administration signed on Wednesday a fresh executive order banning transactions with eight Chinese-connected apps, including China's leading mobile payment business Alipay. 

The move is yet another wanton, self-dealing attempt to victimize foreign companies for sheer political gains, digging holes for the incoming administration when it comes to handling China-US relations. Such abuse of state power is self-sabotaging to the United States and will cause the US market, businesses and financial community to pay the price.

The latest groundless act, along with a string of punitive moves targeting Chinese companies in recent years, will further deteriorate America's business environment, scale up the risks of plunging the anemic US economy into deeper sluggishness, and could wear down the confidence of global investors in the US market.

While sanctioning foreign firms under the same old pretext of national security concerns, decision-makers in Washington have as always failed to come up with any concrete evidence to prop up its accusations. It seems that as long as they see fit, facts can be tossed aside.

Apparently, those charges, which are based on a notorious zero-sum mindset, have exposed the sitting US administration's habitual indulgence in protectionism as well as economic bullyism. Any foreign firms could be put into the crosshairs for arbitrary punishment if they are taken as a so-called threat to the United States by those Washington politicians.

The escalating hostility towards Chinese companies also shows the current US administration's last-ditch efforts to pander to its entrenched voting base at the cost of the greater good of the country, and further dwindle the elbow room for the new administration to handle the world's most important bilateral relationship.

The good news is that the outgoing administration's abusive of state power in economic sectors has been rejected by some US market players.

The New York Stock Exchange announced on Monday local time that it will no longer delist three Chinese telecom giants, abandoning its earlier plan made following a US government order issued in November last year.

That reveals Wall Street's unwillingness to follow the current administration's policy decisions and refuse to be hijacked by self-defeating political maneuvers.

Decision-makers in the White House, both current and future ones, must realize that arbitrary suppression against foreign companies will do nothing but harm the country's global standing as a rules-based free market economy and is bound to boomerang. Only by returning to respect the rule of law and market principles can the United States gradually build back better.

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