Would You Pay $9,000 for an iPhone? The Problems With a U.S.-China Economic Divorce

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NEW YORK, October 16, 2019 — Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China and author of Alibaba: The House That Jack Built, explains what may happen to consumer prices if the "great decoupling" between China and the United States accelerates. (2 min., 6 sec.)

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Exactly! I've always said Americans are complaining about jobs they don't want to do. And they certainly don't want to do them for the low wages that these companies are offering. Hell, I don't think the Chinese people that are doing these jobs want to do them for the low wages they're being given. It's going to be a real shock for Americans. Our stance is very reactive when should've been proactive years ago. We should've been proactive in trying to keep our companies here. That's why America is in this predicament.

TommyDJr
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Maybe many manufacturing sites in Vietnam are controlled by chinese bosses, but people in China do not get the jobs. So yes, it does hurt chinese economy. Also, how much do you want to pay for freedom, Mr?

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