Beijing Review

Don’t Blame Supply Chains

The author is a faculty member at Yale University and former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia

Global supply chains—technically dubbed global value chains (GVCs)—have become weaponized in the economic battles of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. The target: China, the West’s favorite scapegoat in a self-serving blame game. Japan has set aside some 243 billion yen ($2.2 billion) of its record 108-trillion-yen ($1-trillion) rescue package to assist companies in pulling operations out of China. Larry Kudlow, top economic adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump, has hinted at providing similar relocation support for U.S. companies.

The goal is three-fold: Punish China for “causing” the coronavirus, eliminate a source of vulnerability in production lines of critical equipment, and bring back home (reshore)

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Beijing Review

Beijing Review3 min readWorld
Age Isn’t Just a Number: Rethinking Civil Service Recruitment
For decades, the upper age limit for civil service applicants in China has been set at 35. Lately, however, there has been much (renewed) discussion on Weibo, a popular Chinese micro-blogging platform, about the possibility of raising the upper age l
Beijing Review4 min read
Piquing The Interest
Pointed karst peaks, surrounded by mist, magic and mystery. These lines did not flow from the calligraphy brush of an ancient Chinese poet but are a haiku written by former Prime Minister of Belgium Herman Van Rompuy, as he found himself a world away
Beijing Review2 min readWorld
Interconnected, Interdependent
Since President Xi Jinping introduced the Global Civilizations Initiative (GCI) a year ago, underlining respect for different civilizations and strengthened mutual learning, the term “civilization” has garnered increasing attention. But what exactly

Related Books & Audiobooks