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薩默斯稱 習近平把特朗普打趴下了

(2025-08-08 06:21:17) 下一個

薩默斯稱中國國家主席習近平贏得與特朗普的貿易戰

 

彭博社 2025年8月7日
https://finance.yahoo.com/video/summers-says-chinas-xi-wins-185656161.html

前財政部長勞倫斯·薩默斯表示,他對其他國家聲稱將在美國投資持懷疑態度。他表示,唐納德·特朗普總統正在疏遠世界其他國家。“在我們推行的戰略中,確實有一個贏家。他的名字是習近平,”薩默斯指的是中國國家主席習近平。薩默斯在彭博電視台與大衛·威斯汀主持的《華爾街周刊》節目中發表了講話。

拉裏·薩默斯稱特朗普的政策“可怕地”像阿根廷的庇隆

前財政部長勞倫斯·薩默斯警告稱,唐納德·特朗普總統

https://financialpost.com/pmn/business-pmn/larry-summers-says-trump-policies-are-scarily-like-argentinas-peron

特朗普的政策有可能使美國走上與戰後阿根廷類似的道路,後者從一個相對先進的發達國家淪為經濟落後者。

克裏斯托弗·安斯蒂 彭博新聞 2025年8月7日
2023年7月13日星期四,哈佛大學名譽校長兼教授拉裏·薩默斯在美國愛達荷州太陽穀舉行的艾倫公司媒體與技術大會上接受彭博電視采訪。該峰會通常是促成並購而非握手的熱門話題,但今年在交易量低迷、通貨膨脹和利率上升的背景下,其基調可能會大不相同。
2023年7月13日星期四,哈佛大學名譽校長兼教授拉裏·薩默斯在美國愛達荷州太陽穀舉行的艾倫公司媒體與技術大會上接受彭博電視采訪。該峰會通常是促成並購而非握手的熱門話題,但今年在交易量低迷、通貨膨脹和利率上升的背景下,其基調可能會大不相同。攝影:大衛·保羅·莫裏斯/彭博社

(彭博社)——美國前財政部長勞倫斯·薩默斯警告稱,唐納德·特朗普總統的政策可能會使美國走上與戰後阿根廷類似的道路,後者從一個相對先進的發達國家淪為經濟落後國家。

薩默斯在彭博電視台大衛·韋斯汀主持的《華爾街周刊》節目中表示:“阿根廷完全偏離了正軌,是因為一位通過民主選舉產生的領導人在幾年內做出的決定,他追求獨裁而不是推崇民主。這應該成為商界和政治進程中每個人的警示。”

已故的胡安·庇隆於1946年創立了民粹主義運動,當時一些觀察家認為阿根廷與加拿大、澳大利亞和新西蘭等國一樣,是一個擁有豐富自然資源的成熟經濟體。庇隆主義倡導進口替代和高關稅,以刺激阿根廷的國內產業發展。根據智庫OMFIF發布的2023年評估報告,貿易保護主義是導致阿根廷經濟衰落的“關鍵政策”。

“隨著時間的推移,民族主義情緒蔓延,經濟成功越來越取決於誰與政府友好,而越來越不取決於誰真正擅長生產產品並與外國人競爭——阿根廷的經濟表現變得災難性,”哈佛大學教授、彭博電視台付費撰稿人薩默斯說道。“如果你仔細想想,就會覺得這種模式與我們目前正在做的事情驚人地相似。”

薩默斯強調,美國確實擁有“高度韌性的機構”和優勢,而這些是庇隆執政時期阿根廷所不具備的。但他將阿根廷的威權主義曆史與這個南美國家的威權主義曆史進行了類比,包括保護主義、“圍繞領導人的個人崇拜”以及對媒體、大學和律師事務所等公民社會部分成員的攻擊。

薩默斯表示,戰後阿根廷以及一戰後一些歐洲國家的專製經曆“是非常值得警示的教訓,我認為美國人需要更加關注,坦率地說,也需要更廣泛地討論”。

特朗普及其內閣首腦們認為,他威脅征收的高額關稅賦予了華盛頓與貿易夥伴之間的籌碼,與一些國家達成的協議將為美國擴大出口提供重大機遇。他們還對許多其他國家和公司承諾的總額達數萬億美元的重大投資項目表示歡迎。

中國是贏家

薩默斯對其中一些承諾表示懷疑。
文章內容
“你不知道它們的含義,因為你不知道基準線應該是多少,”他說。

這位前財政部長還警告說,“將會有大量投資流出——因為當我們提高所有投入品的價格時,我們正在使自己成為一個更加麻煩的生產中心。”

特朗普已經實施或計劃實施

針對鋼鐵、鋁、半導體和銅等多種用於製造製成品的產品,進行了反複的抨擊。

“我懷疑,其中一些後果很可能是製造業在數量上規模縮小,質量上也更差,”他說道。

更廣泛地說,薩默斯表示,保護主義和民族主義政策“正在疏遠世界其他國家”。“更高的投入成本、給投資者帶來更大的不確定性以及疏遠客戶,這不可能是正確的策略,”他說道。

“這裏有一個贏家——在我們推行的戰略中,確實有一個贏家。他的名字是習近平,”薩默斯在談到中國國家主席時說道。

Summers Says China's Xi Wins Trade War With Trump

Bloomberg  
 
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers says he's skeptical of other countries that say they are going to invest in the US. He says President Donald Trump is alienating the rest of the world. "There's a winner here there really is a winner here in the strategy that we are pursuing. His name is Xi Jinping," Summers said, referring to China's president. Summers speaks on Bloomberg Television's Wall Street Week with David Westin.
 
Larry Summers Says Trump Policies Are 'Scarily' Like Argentina's Peron
 
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers warned that President Donald
 
 
Trump’s policies risk putting the US on a similar path to that of postwar Argentina, which descended from being a relatively advanced developed nation into an economic laggard.
 
Christopher Anstey Bloomberg News  Aug 07, 2025
Larry Summers, president emeritus and professor at Harvard University, during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, US, on Thursday, July 13, 2023. The summit is typically a hotbed for etching out mergers over handshakes, but could take on a much different tone this year against the backdrop of lackluster deal volume, inflation and higher interest rates.
Larry Summers, president emeritus and professor at Harvard University, during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, US, on Thursday, July 13, 2023. The summit is typically a hotbed for etching out mergers over handshakes, but could take on a much different tone this year against the backdrop of lackluster deal volume, inflation and higher interest rates. PHOTO BY DAVID PAUL MORRIS /Bloomberg
 
(Bloomberg) — Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers warned that President Donald Trump’s policies risk putting the US on a similar path to that of postwar Argentina, which descended from being a relatively advanced developed nation into an economic laggard.
 
“Argentina went completely off track because of decisions made in a few years by an elected — through a democracy — leader who pursued autocracy rather than venerating democracy,” Summers said on Bloomberg Television’s Wall Street Week with David Westin. “And that should be a cautionary tale for everyone in the business community and everyone involved in our political process.”
 
The late Juan Perón founded a populist movement in 1946 at a time when Argentina was grouped by some observers with the likes of Canada, Australia and New Zealand as a sophisticated economy with abundant natural resources. Peronism championed import substitution and high tariffs in an effort to stoke Argentina’s domestic industry. Trade protectionism was “the key policy” leading to its economic downfall, according to a 2023 assessment published by the think tank OMFIF.
 
“Over time, as the nationalism took hold, as economic success became more and more about who is friends with the government — and less and less about who was really good at producing products and competing with foreigners — Argentina’s economic performance became calamitous,” said Summers, a Harvard University professor and paid contributor to Bloomberg TV. “It’s a model that, if you think about it, is scarily reminiscent of what we are doing right now.”
 
Summers highlighted that the US does have “highly resilient institutions” and strengths such that Argentina didn’t have when Peron came to office. But he drew parallels with the South American nation’s authoritarian past including protectionism, “a cult of personality around the leader” and attacks on parts of civil society such as media outlets, universities and law firms. 
 
The autocratic experiences of postwar Argentina, along with a number of European nations after World War I “are very cautionary lessons that I think Americans need to pay more attention to and frankly, need to be more widely discussed,” Summers said.
 
Trump and his cabinet chiefs have argued that the steep tariffs he’s threatened have given Washington leverage with trading partners, and that deals with some nations will provide a major opportunity for the US to expand its exports. They have also hailed pledges for major investment projects from a slew of other countries and companies, totaling trillions of dollars.
 
China as Winner
 
Summers expressed skepticism about some of those promises.
Article content

“You don’t know what they mean, because you don’t know what the baseline would have been,” he said. 

The former Treasury secretary also cautioned that there’s going to be “a lot of investment that goes out — because we’re making ourselves such a more problematic hub for production when we’re raising the price of all the inputs.”
 
Trump has imposed or planned tariffs on a number of products used in making manufactured goods, such as steel, aluminum, semiconductors and copper.
 
“I suspect the consequence of some of this may well be a manufacturing sector that is both quantitatively smaller and qualitatively inferior,” he said.
 
More broadly, Summers said “we are alienating the rest of the world” with protectionist and nationalist policies. “Higher priced inputs, much more uncertainty for investors and alienating of customers can’t be the right strategy,” he said.
 
“There’s a winner here — there really is a winner here in the strategy that we are pursuing. His name is Xi Jinping,” Summers said, referring to China’s president.
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