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Benefits of Sino-US trade ties highlighted

Firms will stay on despite tariff barriers, with many planning to invest more, says Neil Bush

By MAY ZHOU in Houston, Texas | China Daily Global | Updated: 2025-05-07 09:52
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A drone photo taken on April 8, 2025 shows a view of a container terminal of Tianjin Port in North China's Tianjin. [Photo/Xinhua]

Bilateral trade has been good for both China and the United States, and despite tariff barriers put up by the administration of US President Donald Trump, US companies are not leaving China, and many of them are actually planning to invest more there, said Neil Bush, son of former US president George H.W. Bush and founder and chairman of George H.W. Bush Foundation for US-China Relations.

"The reality is that the US-China relationship has led to the greatest economic development that could ever have been imagined," Bush said during an exclusive interview with China Daily. "Our bilateral trade relationship, which is part of the whole process of globalization, has led America to become the greatest, strongest nation on the face of the planet. We've been at full employment for many years."

Meanwhile, China has grown to become the second-largest economy after the US, and Bush calls that a win-win for both.

The anti-globalization movement is negatively impacting the US-China relationship, said Bush. "There's an even more fundamental concern that China's rise represents a threat to America, to our standing in the world, to our way of life, to our economy. And I don't buy it."

Bush, a businessman based in Houston, Texas, visited China for the first time in 1975, and has made frequent trips to the country in the past 50 years. "I don't think China has the intention of subverting our economy. Every time I go to China, which is often, I hear businesspeople and government officials say, we want more collaboration with the United States."

He said the narrative of "Making America Great Again" is wrong. "We have been great. We are great. We will be a great nation going forward," he said.

But the greatness of America is deteriorating, said Bush, not because of China, but "because we're becoming an unreliable friend. Our greatness is being diminished by our waffling and indecisiveness and policy switching every single day, and by the tariffs that are going up and then going out and this and that, it's kind of crazy".

Bush said the impact of the tariffs is yet to be felt. "The impact of tariffs will be to raise prices for American consumers, and will be to slow economic development globally. It'll slow the economy of China, and it'll hurt our economy," said Bush, adding that US citizens will be threatened with job losses from a slowing economy as a result of the tariffs.

Bush said that Trump's justification for the tariffs is that the US has been ripped off and jobs have been taken away. However, tariffs will not bring manufacturing jobs back to the US, but will go to other countries such as Vietnam or India instead.

"We are not a manufacturing economy anymore, so we shouldn't pretend that's something we should even desire to do."

He said it was a mistake to consider trade deficits as a bad thing, to view it as winning by China and losing by the US. "Trade deficit doesn't show anything except for the fact that we're buying more stuff from China than China's buying from us, which to me shows we're the stronger of the two nations."

Bush said China continues to be more efficient in manufacturing. "It's not cheap labor, by the way. It's automation. It's robotics. It's AI." He has been working with a car company in Anhui province to help with their internationalization. He recently toured one of their plants and marveled at the sight of mechanical arms moving the pieces around.

"I've been to factories that make all kinds of different products. I've seen the result of these products, like drones that are flying doing investigations of power plants and the grid and different kinds of things. There's technology that's being developed in China that makes it the No 1 manufacturing country in the world. I'm dying to find ways to bring those kinds of technology breakthroughs to the US," he said.

China remains attractive to US companies, Bush said. His friend Harley Seyedin runs the American Chamber of Commerce in South China, which recently released the 2025 special report on US companies in South China.

"Interestingly, in the day and age where you would think the Americans are abandoning China, and you read the headlines that Apple's phones that are made in China and shipped to the US are now going to be made in India, not one of the companies in South China is leaving," Bush said.

He also said that a large percentage are investing even more money in their operations in China. "They continue to realize the benefit of having access to the China market and of making their stuff in China that they can export to the rest of the world. So, in spite of this rhetoric that you think Americans aren't going to China, the businesses that are there are staying there and building their businesses there."

Back after a recent trip to China, Bush said he found the Chinese businesspeople and individuals he talked to had a positive attitude toward their economy, their standing and role in the world. "Even though these tariffs are going to be punishing for China, it's not going to cripple China," he said.

Although there are anti-China sentiments in the US, Bush said he's optimistic that the US and China will be able to reach some deal to continue this relationship. "I can't imagine a time in the near future where we won't have some level of trade," he said.

Bush said there's a misunderstanding in the US based on false narratives that have been promoted by politicians "who for their own political gain get traction by bashing China, by belittling China, and by making China out to be an enemy for America".

He wishes for more exchanges at every level between the two countries. "I really believe, as my father believed, that by being present with others, by putting yourself in the other guy's shoes, you know, by establishing a deeper understanding through respectful dialogue that you could accomplish so much together. And this world needs collaboration these days on issues that are prominent as it relates to sustaining life on earth for humans."

For that, the US-China bilateral collaboration is critical, said Bush.

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