Opinion | Anxious West seeks to rewrite global trade rules to counter China

For decades, the United States and Europe championed an open trading system built on multilateral rules, comparative advantage and global supply chains. They also urged China to open up its markets, lower tariffs, welcome foreign investment, strengthen intellectual property protection and integrate into the rules-based trading system.
Yet, as industrial competition intensifies, governments increasingly fear deindustrialisation, supply-chain vulnerabilities, technological dependence and the political consequences of economic dislocation. From Washington’s tariffs and industrial subsidies to Europe’s growing embrace of trade defence instruments, protectionism seems to be back in vogue.
China changed laws and regulations to meet international standards. It welcomed foreign joint ventures and wholly foreign-owned enterprises, deregulated its economy, created more incentives for businesses and entrepreneurs, and offered stronger protection for intellectual property rights. In other words, China did the things its trading partners wanted it to do.









