U.S. has no problems unloading soybeans in light of Chinese tariffs

Define winning.

We cannot win a trade-war with China as they don't buy our goods. The deficit is a structural "problem" between a mature, service-economy vs. a developing economy.
Right, we buy $500 billion in goods from China and they purchase $150 billion from us but what they CAN do is level the playing field a bit by allowing our corps to better sell there services and build there businesses there. A lot of American corps have money trapped in China due to tight money controls, which do work as Cyprus showed everyone.
 
Define winning.

We cannot win a trade-war with China as they don't buy our goods. The deficit is a structural "problem" between a mature, service-economy vs. a developing economy.


Oh I dunno, could well be a lose lose situation. I just mean in the sense of who would cry uncle first. Just found the article interesting.
 
So the thing in the article about Brazil selling its soybeans to the chinese got me thinking. im not saying these are the facts, but lets just assume the facts are:

total world supply of soybeans - 120 tons

US supply of soybeans - 50 tons

chinese consumption of soybeans - 60 tons

to the extent that is the case, do the tariffs really have any impact? china just switches to other providers for its soybeans, the US switches to supply those who were previously supplying the chinese, and boom no tariffs, no?

now if chinese comsumes all of the non-US world production of soybeans, and then some, that is a different story it would seem.
 
to the extent that is the case, do the tariffs really have any impact? china just switches to other providers for its soybeans, the US switches to supply those who were previously supplying the chinese, and boom no tariffs, no?

How much do the new trade routes cost relative to the pre-tariff ones?

How much less quantity of units are demanded?
 
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