NEW YORK, June 4 -- Blaming China for homegrown economic problems in the United States "is an unfortunate mechanism of political convenience," a leading U.S. economist has said.
"For far too long, Washington has entered into an unsustainable social contract with the American people -- a bloated healthcare sector, outsize military expenditures, and low taxes that require imported surplus saving and large trade deficits to fund this economic over-reach," said Stephen Roach, a senior fellow at Yale University's Jackson Institute of Global Affairs, in a recent email interview with Xinhua.
As an economy lacking in savings, the United States must import capital abroad from world's major surplus savers, including China, to invest and grow, the former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia said.
"The blame game" is only "identifying others as the culprit rather than admitting responsibility for deep-rooted problems," Roach said.
According to the senior economist, the U.S. net domestic saving rate in the first quarter of 2019 stood at 2.4 percent, "well less than half the 6.3 percent average that prevailed over the final three decades of the 20th century (from 1970-1999)."
He pointed out the notion that levying tariffs could help fix trade deficits "is factually and analytically wrong," since they cannot reduce the size and scope of the overall multilateral trade deficit.
Washington must figure out a way to start saving again if it does not want a trade deficit, however, the possibility seems unlikely in light of its large and rising budget deficits in the years ahead, Roach said.
【国际英语资讯:Interview: China-bashing not solution to U.S. homegrown problems, says economist】相关文章:
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