Updated
Updated · Global Times · Jul 15
China Warns Decoupling Would Cost West $23.6 Trillion by 2050
Updated
Updated · Global Times · Jul 15

China Warns Decoupling Would Cost West $23.6 Trillion by 2050

1 articles · Updated · Global Times · Jul 15

Summary

  • Lin Jian said Europe and the US would pay heavily to cut reliance on China, warning that forced supply-chain reengineering would “cost everyone more and deliver less.”
  • The warning followed an EY-Parthenon study cited by the Financial Times estimating decoupling costs at $13.7 trillion for the US, $9.1 trillion for the eurozone and $800 billion for the UK by 2050.
  • Lin argued the figures show global industrial chains are deeply interconnected and that security should come from cooperation rather than isolation or protectionist barriers.
  • China said it will keep pursuing high-standard opening-up and work with other countries to keep supply chains stable, unimpeded and resistant to bloc confrontation.

Insights

Can Western economies truly afford the $24 trillion price tag for decoupling from China?
With China's new laws, how can global firms avoid being trapped between opposing regulations?
Is 'derisking' a workable middle path, or just a slower road to economic divorce?