Sunday, August 9, 2020

Tim Taylor: The World Economy Through a PPP Lens [feedly]

An interesting and useful tutorial on the different methods of measuring the performance of different national economies.

The World Economy Through a PPP Lens
https://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-world-economy-through-ppp-lens.html

When comparing the size of economies, you need to use an exchange rate to convert the GDP of one country, measured in its own currency, to compare with the GDP of the other country. But what exchange rate to use? 

An obvious choice is the market exchange rate. An equally obvious problem is that the exchange rates fluctuate.  If the exchange rate of a country strengthens by 10% in a certain month, that of course doesn't mean that the standard of living for people in that country rose by 10% during that month. When you compare economies using a market exchange rate, it's a little like measuring with a ruler which without warning grows and shrinks. 

There's also a more subtle problem with using market exchange rates to compare economies. Say that in one country, housing or health care or higher education is much cheaper than in some other country. As a concrete example, one often reads about moving or retiring to some other country with a much lower cost of living--where you can buy that lovely home for so much less than in the United States. If you just look at total size of GDP for that country with lower prices, converted at a market exchange rate, you would not be able to tell that because of the lower price level, the GDP actually represents a higher quantity of goods being consumed than you might expect. 

A common alternative is "purchasing power parity" exchange rates. Like the name implies, these exchange rates are calculated to reflect the purchasing power of a currency within the country. This is not a new idea: the first academic research using a PPP exchange rate was published in 1940. But in recent decades, the standard source for calculating PPP exchange rates is the International Comparison Project at the World Bank, which has published its report "Purchasing Power Parities and the Size of World Economies: Results from the 2017 International Comparison Program" (May 2020)

It is typically true that lower-income countries have cheaper goods and services. Thus,  when you look at the purchasing power of their currency in their own country, it tends to be greater than the market exchange rate would imply. Here's a figure showing price levels across countries. The horizontal axis shows per capita GDP, so higher-income countries are on the right. The vertical axis shows the price level across countries. The figure helps explain why places like Mexico and Thailand are such popular tourist and even retirement destinations for people from high-income countries: your income buys more in those countries. 
Essentially, a PPP exchange rate adjusts for these differences in buying power. As a result, using PPP exchange rates makes GDP for lower- and middle-income countries. As the report notes: "In 2017, global output, when measured by purchasing power parities (PPPs), was $119,547 billion, compared with $79,715 billion, when measured by market exchange rates.... In 2017 lower-middle-income
economies contributed around 16 percent to PPP-based global GDP, while upper-middle-income
economies contributed 34 percent. At the same time, high-income economies contributed 49 percent.
In terms of market exchange rates, these shares were 8 percent, 28 percent, and 64 percent,
respectively." 
If the comparison is done using a PPP exchange rate, the economy of China was bigger than that of the United States in 2017. 

Here's an overview of the global economy measured in per capita GDP. The vertical axis measures the share of global population--and population is shown by the height of each bar. Thus, the bars for China, India, and the United States are especially tall. The horizontal width of the bar measures per capita GDP, using a PPP comparison. The light-blue lines on the left show 2011; the darker-blue bars on the right show 2017. You can see a number of modest changes in this six-year period: the rise of China and India, Turkey moving ahead of the Russian Federation in per capita GDP, and others.  
Two additional thoughts are worth passing along. First, the PPP exchange rates are explicitly intended to compare GDP, per capita GDP, and similar measures across countries, to make that useful adjustment for different price levels across countries. For other uses, they may not be appropriate. The report notes: "ICP PPPs are designed specifically for international comparisons of GDP. They are not designed
for comparisons of monetary flows or trade flows. International comparisons of flows—such
as development aid, foreign direct investment, migrants' remittances, or imports and exports of
goods and services—should be made with market exchange rates, not with PPPs."

Second, it may have occurred to you that measuring price levels in a comparable way across all the countries of the world, in a way that adjusts for differences in quality and availability of various goods and services, is a Herculean task. There's a reason why the estimated PPP exchange rates for 2017 are being published in 2020--it takes time to put all this together. The report describes the methodology in some detail, but there is room for skepticism. Indeed, back in in 2010 Angus Deaton devoted his Presidential Address to the American Economic Association (freely available on-line here) to detailing the "weak theoretical and empirical foundations" of such measurements. But for anyone who ha read this far, it will come as no surprise that imperfect economic statistics can still be useful, when applied with context and caution. 

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Trump Executive Orders Likely Won’t Help the Millions Struggling to Pay Rent [feedly]

Trump Executive Orders Likely Won't Help the Millions Struggling to Pay Rent
https://www.cbpp.org/blog/trump-executive-orders-likely-wont-help-the-millions-struggling-to-pay-rent

President Trump's expected executive order to extend, if not expand, the CARES Act's federal ban on evictions, which recently expired, very likely will prove woefully inadequate to help people experiencing homelessness or the millions of renters struggling to pay rent.


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Biz Insider: Trump's $400 weekly boost to unemployment insurance won't increase benefits for jobless Americans anytime soon [feedly]

Trump's $400 weekly boost to unemployment insurance won't increase benefits for jobless Americans anytime soon
https://www.businessinsider.com/when-will-americans-get-trump-unemployment-benefits-400-dollars-2020-8?utm_source=feedly&utm_medium=webfeeds

  • President Donald Trump signed an executive action on Saturday to enact a $400 weekly boost to state unemployment benefits, a cut from the $600 level it once was during the coronavirus pandemic.
  • But a closer look at the text of the order reveals the administration is actually setting up a "lost wages assistance" program.
  • "This is outside the UI system entirely," said Michele Evermore, a national unemployment expert, adding it could take months for overwhelmed states to design.
  • Governors are being ordered to work with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in order to set up the benefit system, and distribute benefits alongside existing state systems.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump signed an array of executive actions on Saturday to bypass Congress and implement economic relief measures on his own.

Among them was a $400 weekly supplement to federal unemployment insurance through December 6. Trump claimed the relief would reach Americans in a "very rapid" manner, but neglected to say how.

It's a significant cut from the $600 level once in effect during the coronavirus pandemic under the CARES Act. That benefit expired in late July, and Republicans are under mounting pressure to replace it with another boost to state payouts.

But a closer reading of the memorandum reveals that the Trump administration is attempting to set up a "lost wages assistance" program outside of the traditional unemployment system.

Since it's being funded with $44 billion from the Department of Homeland Security's disaster relief fund, governors are ordered to work with the Federal Emergency Management Administration to manage the new initiative. FEMA is usually the agency responsible for doling out government relief after natural disasters like hurricanes and wildfires.

Trump's memo says states should kick in 25% of the funding, and the federal government will pick up the rest. It means states would fund $100 of the benefit, and the federal government's contribution is capped at $300.

But there are strings attached: jobless people only qualify for federal aid if they already receive at least $100 from their state in weekly benefits.

Read more: 'The most extreme valuations in history': A notorious market bear says investors should brace for record-low negative returns over the next 12 years — and warns that today's exuberance implies a 66% plunge

In other words, it's a new program that state governments are being tasked to design from the ground up — and experts say they likely won't be able to implement it for months.

Plus, the executive branch assembling a new benefit program is all but certain to spark court challenges. During his press conference, Trump said he believed such challenges would go "very rapidly through the courts, if we get sued — maybe we won't get sued."

'This is outside the UI system entirely'

Reuters

"States have to follow federal law to pay unemployment insurance benefits," Michele Evermore, a prominent unemployment expert at the National Employment Law Project, told Business Insider on Saturday. "[The administration] can't call it unemployment insurance since it's a whole other program."

"This is outside the UI system entirely," Evermore said, adding "this will be difficult" for states to carry out, since state agencies are still overwhelmed with a massive backlog of claims. She estimated it could take "months."

The funding mechanism also raised concerns. The memo outlines states can draw from existing relief funds under the CARES Act.

Read more: 100 deals and $1 million in profit a year: Here's how Mike Simmons made a simple change to his real-estate investing strategy that took him from small-time house flipper to full-fledged mogul

But experts say many states already tapped most of that federal money.

Michael Leachman, vice president for state fiscal policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, noted in a blog post that states such as California, Colorado, and Mississippi had allocated all their money. Others — including South Carolina, Kentucky, and Louisiana — already distributed significant portions of it.

Getting an entirely new benefit program up and running would delay aid to unemployed Americans struggling to make ends meet. Nearly 31 million Americans are on unemployment, drawing state benefits averaging $330 a week nationwide.

Meanwhile, Democrats blasted Trump's executive orders. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement on Saturday that the administration's moves amounted to little more than empty gestures.

"These policy announcements provide little real help to families," Pelosi and Schumer said. "Instead of passing a bill, now President Trump is cutting families' unemployment benefits and pushing states further into budget crises, forcing them to make devastating cuts to life-or-death services."

NOW WATCH: How billionaires got $637 billion richer during the coronavirus pandemic

See Also:


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Bloomberg: Trump's Payroll Tax Action Creates Political, Business Risks [feedly]

Trump's Payroll Tax Action Creates Political, Business Risks
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-08-09/trump-s-payroll-tax-cut-move-creates-political-business-risks

President Donald Trump's move to halt the collection of taxes that fund America's main support programs for the elderly spurred a wave of political opposition and threatens to generate tension between employers and workers.

Trump in a memorandum on Saturday instructed the deferral of payroll tax collections for some workers. The taxes are paid by both employees and their employers, and fund Social Security and Medicare for those already using those programs.

But because congressional approval is needed to enact changes in federal levies, the amounts foregone under the order will still come due next year, unless legislators act.

Initial reaction reinforced the message that both Democrats and Republicans had sent the White House during the talks on a coronavirus relief package that collapsed on Friday: don't do it. Underlying that opposition is concern that hurting the finances of the massive programs that pay retirement and health care benefits for the aged, along with disability income, will be punished by voters.

Changes to Social Security, a program with widespread support that's been around since 1935, were once called the "third rail" of American politics -- an allusion to the danger of electrocution.

Vital Program

The program that emerged from the Great Depression is the largest single source of income for older Americans, providing the majority of income for half of retirees, and at least 90% of income for 18% of retirees, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive think-tank. It's particularly important to women and people of color. Politicians meddle with it at their peril.

Social Security and Medicare already face a dire outlook. Though payroll taxes ostensibly go to "trust funds" that build up assets from which the benefits are paid, the demographic challenge posed by the large, rapidly-retiring baby-boomer generation means there's not enough money for the government's obligations. Further starving the programs through a payroll-tax deferral makes Trump's move a risky gambit.

Read more: Social Security Trust Fund Seen Running Dry Early on Virus Drain

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said Saturday that Trump was "putting Social Security at grave risk." With no suggestion of how the forgone funding will be made up, the president's move is the "first shot in a new, reckless war" on the program, Biden said.

Representative Richard Neal of Massachusetts, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said Trump's "decree is a poorly disguised first step in an effort to fully dismantle these vital programs by executive fiat."

Four-Month Deferral

The Trump campaign has made similar criticisms of Biden, drawing on some of his positions from decades in the Senate to argue that he had advocated cutting Social Security. But the president is now the one raising questions about the government's ability to pay full benefits, with Trump indicating Saturday that if re-elected he would propose a permanent payroll tax elimination.

Saturday's executive action suspends the payroll tax for those making less than $100,000 a year from Sept. 1 through the end of 2020. Trump said that if re-elected he'll "extend it beyond the end of the year and terminate the tax." He didn't mention Social Security and Medicare or indicate how the funds would be made up.

Republicans in Congress have preferred another round of stimulus checks that left the government's social safety nets untouched. A number of them, including Senator Mitt Romney, the former Republican presidential candidate, in recent days moved to insert text into Covid-19 stimulus legislation that would set up committees charged with crafting bills to secure the long-term funding of Social Security along with other key programs.

Read more: Stimulus Talks Could Snag on Social Security Review Panels

Bipartisan criticism of Trump's move was quick to emerge.

"Trump does not have the power to unilaterally rewrite the payroll tax law," Republican Senator Ben Sasse said in a statement Saturday. "Under the Constitution, that power belongs to the American people acting through their members of Congress."

Larry Kudlow, Trump's top White House economic adviser, recognized that a legal battle may now ensue over the grounds raised by Sasse. "We're going to go ahead with our actions anyway. Our counsel's office, the Treasury Department believes it has the authority to temporarily suspend tax collections," he said on ABC's "This Week."

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said there will be no cuts to Social Security or Medicare from the deferred payroll tax collection, and that they would be paid out from the general federal budget. "The president in no way wants to hurt those trust funds," he said on Fox News Sunday.

Payroll tax cuts have been embraced by both Republicans and Democrats in the past to give consumer spending a boost, but they haven't been big political winners.

Not Impactful

Congress temporarily cut the payroll tax by two percentage points under President Barack Obama in 2011 and 2012. However, most people didn't really notice a change to their take-home pay, according to research by the left-leaning Center for Economic and Policy Research. More than half of the respondents said they didn't know their tax payments had changed.

President George W. Bush, when faced with a slowdown, opted for stimulus checks, similar to the $1,200 payments Congress approved earlier this year. Republicans and Democrats have both said they support a second round, but negotiations on a broader deal have stalled. Trump can't order more payments with executive authority.

For businesses, Trump's Saturday move presents other challenges. If Congress doesn't ultimately cancel the amounts due and not paid in 2020, they could be on the hook to pay the Treasury next year.

'Steer Clear'

"Without detailed answers to some of these questions, employers might just steer clear of all of it by continuing to do what they've always done, blunting the desired economic impact of reducing taxes," the National Taxpayers Union Foundation said in a statement.

If firms pass on the temporary savings to their staff, they could face difficulties clawing back the money in 2021 -- all the more so if some workers have moved on. And any move to continue collecting the fees could mean tensions with employees whose household incomes have already been hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

Employees would also owe more income taxes because their wages would be higher, meaning that some could see a smaller tax refund in 2021 -- or owe money to the government -- if they don't adjust their IRS withholding.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said Saturday that Trump's executive actions aren't a full solution.

"There is no alternative to Congress legislating and no excuse for their inaction," Neil Bradley, the chamber's chief policy officer, said in a statement.


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Thursday, August 6, 2020

Global Policy: What is Environmental Racism? [feedly]

What is Environmental Racism?
https://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/04/08/2020/what-environmental-racism

Poisoned tap water in Flint, Michigan. Toxic waste dumps in the Lower Rio Grande Valley. A town in China where 80% of children have been poisoned by old computer parts. What do these things have in common?

All are examples of environmental racism, a form of systemic racism whereby communities of colour are disproportionately burdened with health hazards through policies and practices that force them to live in proximity to sources of toxic waste such as sewage works, mines, landfills, power stations, major roads and emitters of airborne particulate matter. As a result, these communities suffer greater rates of health problems attendant on hazardous pollutants.

It was African American civil rights leader Benjamin Chavis who coined the term "environmental racism" in 1982, describing it as "racial discrimination in environmental policy-making, the enforcement of regulations and laws, the deliberate targeting of communities of colour for toxic waste facilities, the official sanctioning of the life-threatening presence of poisons and pollutants in our communities, and the history of excluding people of colour from leadership of the ecology movements".

In practice, environmental racism can take many forms, from workplaces with unsound health regulations to the siting of coal-fired power stations close to predominantly non-white communities. It can mean citizens drinking contaminated groundwater or being schooled in decaying buildings with asbestos problems.

Many of these problems face low-income communities as a whole, but race is often a more reliable indicator of proximity to pollution. A landmark 2007 study by academic Dr Robert Bullard – the "father of environmental justice" – found "race to be more important than socioeconomic status in predicting the location of the nation's commercial hazardous waste facilities". He proved that African American children were five times more likely to have lead poisoning from proximity to waste than Caucasian children, while even black Americans making $50-60,000 a year were more likely to live in polluted areas than their white counterparts making $10,000. In the UK meanwhile, a government report found that black British children are exposed to up to 30% more air pollution than white children.

G1

Lead astray

The case of Flint, Michigan, is a prime example of environmental racism. In 2014, to save money, the city changed its water source to the Flint river, but failed to treat the new supply adequately, exposing the city's 100,000 majority-black inhabitants to dangerous levels of lead from ageing pipes and other contaminants such as E.coli. Between 6,000 and 12,000 children drank tap water containing high levels of lead, a neurotoxin, while 12 citizens eventually died from Legionnaires' disease. However, for 18 months, residents' complaints of foul-smelling and discoloured water, of hair loss and skin rashes, were dismissed until community pressure forced the city to reconnect to the former supply and admit wrongdoing. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission concluded that the slow official reaction was a "result of systemic racism".

Lead astray

The case of Flint, Michigan, is a prime example of environmental racism. In 2014, to save money, the city changed its water source to the Flint river, but failed to treat the new supply adequately, exposing the city's 100,000 majority-black inhabitants to dangerous levels of lead from ageing pipes and other contaminants such as E.coli. Between 6,000 and 12,000 children drank tap water containing high levels of lead, a neurotoxin, while 12 citizens eventually died from Legionnaires' disease. However, for 18 months, residents' complaints of foul-smelling and discoloured water, of hair loss and skin rashes, were dismissed until community pressure forced the city to reconnect to the former supply and admit wrongdoing. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission concluded that the slow official reaction was a "result of systemic racism".

So what is being done? The environmental justice movement works to raise awareness of the plights of vulnerable populations through academic studies, media pressure campaigns and public activism. Grassroots movements make use of social media, along with civil disobedience and marches, to make their views heard. The European Union, where most documented cases of environmental racism affect the Romani people, has funded initiatives including the Environmental Justice Organisations, Liabilities and Trade project, which ran from 2011-2015 and brought together scientists and policy-makers from 20 countries across the world to advance the case of environmental justice. As environmental laws tighten in developed countries however, many fear that dumping activities will shift towards the global south.

Combating environmental racism may risk falling down the policy in the age of COVID-19 – and yet with non-white people more likely to die from the virus, the higher instances of complicating factors such as asthma and heart disease brought about by exposure to pollution are likely to play a part. Environmental racism is part of the broader picture of systemic racism, which must be fought to bring about a fairer society.


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Equitable Growth: Twenty-one policy resources to combat the coronavirus recession [feedly]

Follow these links, and not activist will come up short with in-depth proposals in almost every policy area.


Twenty-one policy resources to combat the coronavirus recession

https://equitablegrowth.org/twenty-one-policy-resources-to-combat-the-coronavirus-recession/

Policymakers learned late last week that the U.S. economy registered a stunning 9.4 percent contraction in the second quarter of this year, a drop not experienced since the Great Depression more than eight decades ago. And that extraordinarily bad news came in late July—following weeks of the novel coronavirus becoming "extraordinarily widespread" across most of the country, leading a number of states and municipalities to restrict or re-restrict economic activity to stem the pandemic and rising number of deaths due to COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. U.S. economists are mildly to extraordinarily concerned that our economy is moving toward further contraction and a possible return to the record unemployment numbers posted this past spring.

In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States, the Washington Center for Equitable Growth launched a new web page dedicated to policy resources for the coronavirus recession. Nearly every day since, we've posted new analysis and policy recommendations backed by evidence-based research on the ways the federal government can help our economy recover and ensure that recovery is broad-based and equitable. Much of this policy work is based on our Vision 2020 project, a resource designed to provide policymakers in Congress and the federal government with detailed policy recommendations on a wide array of issues.

Together, these two resource pages on our website point to workable solutions to the multitude of interconnected economic travails besetting the country. Some of these ideas are immediately relevant to economic growth for the remainder of the year, particularly the need to deal with the spread of the coronavirus itself as the first order of business. Other ideas on these resource pages point to ways policymakers can ensure the recovery from this recession is different from past ones. Here is a list of some of these most relevant posts.

Jobs and Unemployment Insurance

"Factsheet: Unemployment Insurance and why the effect of work disincentives is greatly overstated amid the coronavirus recession"

"Fool Me Once: Investing in Unemployment Insurance systems to avoid the mistakes of the Great Recession during COVID-19"

"Coronavirus recession layoffs require reforms to the Unemployment Insurance program now to fully protect all U.S. workers"

Child care

"Child care is essential for working parents, but is the industry ready and safe to reopen?"

"The coronavirus pandemic requires a wartime commitment for essential workers' access to child care"

"How the coronavirus pandemic is harming family well-being for U.S. low-wage workers"

Paid leave

"New analysis shows state paid leave programs cushioned the blow of COVID-19, sparking important new questions"

"The economic imperative of enacting paid family leave across the United States"

Small businesses

"Did the Paycheck Protection Program work for small businesses across the United States?"

"More resilient small U.S. restaurants and their workers can exit the coronavirus recession and sustain an equitable economic recovery"

"Rescuing small businesses to fight the coronavirus recession and prevent further economic inequality in the United States"

The coronavirus and structural racism

"A feminist economic policy agenda in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the quest for racial justice"

"The coronavirus recession is an opportunity to cancel all U.S. student loan debt"

"New congressional reports underscore structural inequalities driving U.S. racial disparities in coronavirus infections and COVID-19 deaths"

The coronavirus and the environment

"Americans want green spending in federal coronavirus recession relief packages"

"Green stimulus, not dirty bailouts, is the smart investment strategy during the coronavirus recession"

The coronavirus and data collection

"The coronavirus pandemic highlights the importance of disaggregating U.S. data by race and ethnicity"

"Data will provide accountability to ensure the U.S. economic recovery is shared broadly"

Social insurance

"Broken plumbing: How systems for delivering economic relief in response to the coronavirus recession failed the U.S. economy"

"New research finds enhanced U.S. social insurance will be necessary until the coronavirus recession recedes"

"The coronavirus recession highlights the importance of automatic stabilizers"

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Chinese FM speaks of need for clear-cut framework for China-U.S. relations [feedly]



Chinese FM speaks of need for clear-cut framework for China-U.S. relations

http://www.ecns.cn/news/politics/2020-08-06/detail-ifzysytt8796799.shtml

Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Wednesday spoke of the need to put in place a clear-cut framework for China-U.S. relations amid the most complex situation since the establishment of the bilateral diplomatic relations in 1979.

China's U.S. policy is always consistent and stable, and in the meantime, China is also prepared for possible bumps and storms ahead, Wang said during an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

"The U.S. move to turn China into an adversary is a fundamental, strategic miscalculation. It means that the United States is funneling its strategic resources in the wrong area," he said.

"We are always ready to develop a China-U.S. relationship featuring no conflict, no confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation based on coordination, cooperation and stability," he added.

In the meantime, China will firmly defend its sovereignty, security and development interests, because this is a legitimate right inherent in China being an independent sovereign state, Wang stressed.

The United States should honor the principle of sovereign equality enshrined in the UN Charter, learn how to get along with different systems and civilizations and adapt itself to peaceful coexistence, and accept the reality that the world is moving toward multipolarity, said Wang.

Wang expounded on the clear-cut framework for the relationship.

First, steer clear of red lines and avoid confrontation. For China-U.S. relations to develop soundly, the most critical thing is mutual respect, Wang noted.

China never intends to and will never interfere in U.S. elections or other U.S. internal affairs. Likewise, the United States must abandon its fantasy of remodeling China to U.S. needs. It must stop its meddling in China's internal affairs, and stop its irrational cracking down on China's legitimate rights and interests, he said.

Second, keep the channels open for candid dialogue. Dialogue is the prerequisite for addressing problems, and without dialogue, problems will only pile up and even get out of control, he said.

"China's door to dialogue remains open. We are willing, in the spirit of equality and open-mindedness, to talk and interact with the United States, and resume dialogue mechanisms at all levels and in all fields," said Wang.

Third, reject decoupling and uphold cooperation. The interests of the two countries are deeply entwined. Forced decoupling will inflict a lasting impact on bilateral relations, and endanger the security of international industrial chains and interests of all countries, Wang said.

With COVID-19 still raging across the world, China is prepared to have mutually beneficial cooperation with the United States on epidemic control and economic recovery, learn from each other and share experience on containing COVID-19, and join together with the United States the global response and multilateral cooperation in fighting COVID-19, he said.

Fourth, abandon the zero-sum mentality and stand up to shared responsibilities. "Our world still faces many global challenges. Traditional and non-traditional security challenges are intertwined. Almost all regional and international hotspot issues require a coordinated response from China, the United States and other countries," he said.

China and the United States must always bear in mind the well-being of mankind, live up to their responsibilities as two major countries, coordinate and cooperate as needed in the UN and other multilateral institutions, and work together for world peace and stability, said Wang.


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