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中国传信 特朗普 美国无法停止中国崛起

(2025-03-23 15:52:27) 下一个

中国向特朗普传递信息:美国无法停止中国崛起

作者:西蒙尼·麦卡锡,CNN 2025 年 3 月 8 日
https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/08/china/china-two-sessions-xi-jinping-trump-trade-war-intl-hnk/index.html

3 月 8 日,中国国家主席习近平在北京人民大会堂出席全国人民代表大会全体会议。

北京,中国CNN —
随着美国总统唐纳德·特朗普在过去一周加大对中国的经济压力,北京发出了自己的信息:中国的崛起不会停止。

在首都举行的一次重要政治会议是北京作出回应的理想背景。在中国的“两会”上,政府公布了计划,并为来年定下了基调。

政府的首要任务是什么?刺激消费需求,确保中国不需要依赖出口来推动其庞大但放缓的经济。接下来,通过增加投资和吸引私营部门,推动国家领导人习近平将中国转变为技术超级大国的努力。

北京正在采取这些举措,为可能与美国进行的长期经济摊牌做准备。特朗普周二将所有中国进口商品的额外关税增加一倍至 20%,并威胁未来将采取更多措施——以及加强对美国在华投资的控制。

中国二号人物李强周三在北京人民大会堂举行的全国人民代表大会开幕会议上对数千名代表说:“我们可以战胜发展道路上的任何困难。”他说,“中国经济这艘巨轮”将“稳步驶向未来”。

周二,外交部发言人在被问及贸易摩擦时更加直接:“如果美国坚持发动关税战、贸易战或任何其他战争,中国将战斗到底,”他对记者说。

中国政治顾问机构中国人民政治协商会议成员出席 3 月 4 日的会议。

虽然北京的优先事项和言论可能与过去几年相似,但这一次,它们来自一个在遭受自身新冠疫情限制、房地产行业危机和与美国的技术战打击后开始恢复自信的国家。

“信心”一直是为期一周的活动的非官方流行语,该活动将于周二结束。周四,中国经济“沙皇”召开新闻发布会,近十几次提到了“信心铸就力量”这个词语,国家媒体对此进行了大肆报道,李克强在全国广播讲话的最后还强调了“信心铸就力量”。

这种乐观情绪可能更多的是愿望,而非现实。许多中国人对未来都抱有不确定性。他们更愿意储蓄而不是消费,而年轻人则在努力找工作,不确定他们的生活是否会比父母更好。

但与去年不同的是,中国正迈入 2025 年,这得益于中国企业和技术在市场中取得的成功。尽管特朗普的回归让北京担心经济风险,但它也在寻找自身崛起的机会。

“到特朗普第二任期结束时,美国的全球地位和可信度形象将下降,”中国人民解放军退役上校、清华大学国际安全与战略研究中心高级研究员周波告诉 CNN。“随着美国实力的下降,中国当然会显得更重要。”

上个月,中国制造商比亚迪生产的一辆电动汽车在中国东南部港口城市广州装上一艘船。

信心增强

这种情绪不仅仅渗透在权力殿堂。

在首都的街道上,闪闪发光的国产电动汽车穿梭在车流中,包括来自汽车制造商比亚迪的汽车,比亚迪目前在全球销售方面与埃隆·马斯克的特斯拉不相上下——这让人想起中国成功成为绿色科技领导者的努力。

然后是票房创纪录的动画片《哪吒2》,以及中国民营人工智能公司DeepSeek的突破性成功。它的大型语言模型震惊了硅谷,颠覆了西方对人工智能相关成本的假设。

本周在北京,“你可以问DeepSeek”已经成为随意谈话中一个俏皮而自豪的笑柄。

“去年,人们可能受到了美国关于中国正在衰落、中国已经达到顶峰的说法的影响,”中国电影导演王义桅说。

北京人民大学国际事务研究所的教授说:“我们仍然面临许多困难。当然,我们仍然面临许多问题,但这并不意味着我们已经达到了中国发展的顶峰。”

特朗普在对美国贸易伙伴征收关税的同时,将重点放在与北京的经济竞争上,这在一些人看来,也是中国发展程度的一个标志。最近一个工作日下午,在北京市中心,接受 CNN 采访的一些路人指出,与美国的竞争是他们国家实力不断增强的标志。

“中国现在发展迅速,引起了国际社会的关注,尤其是美国的关注,”但这可能不是坏事,一位姓夏的医学研究生说。“特朗普提高关税就是竞争……如果没有竞争,中国的独立发展可能就不可持续。”

中国“两会”开幕之际,北京人民大会堂外站着安保人员。

中国“两会”开幕之际,安保人员站在北京人民大会堂外。

激烈竞争

尽管中国官员试图展现信心,但国际观察人士表示,本周宣布的经济刺激措施表明,北京正为即将到来的重大挑战做好准备。

李克强总理在开幕致辞中提到了这一点。他说:“外部环境越来越复杂和严峻,可能会对中国的贸易、科技和其他领域产生更大影响。”

中国不想在应对国内经济疲软的同时应对这种波动。这就是为什么它试图刺激消费和刺激增长的原因之一,今年设定了“5% 左右”的雄心勃勃的扩张目标。北京也意识到,贸易摩擦意味着经济需要减少对出口的依赖。

“北京很可能已经考虑过贸易战 2.0 的可能情况,但无论发生什么,很明显中国的增长将不得不更多地依赖国内需求,”新加坡国立大学东亚研究所教授、前世界银行中国区主任伯特·霍夫曼在一份报告中表示。

不过,一些分析师表示,北京的举措缺乏细节,而且远没有达到刺激经济和提振消费者信心所需的力度。

“这说明领导层希望重新关注增长和发展,但仍希望在刺激方面只采取必要的措施来实现这一目标,”亚洲协会政策研究所中国分析中心研究员迈克尔·希尔森表示。

习近平可能还在平衡这一目标和另一个担忧:如果中国面临“与唐纳德·特朗普打交道的四年艰难时期”,需要保留一些火力来支持经济,”他说。

上个月,在中国东部南京举行的机器人展览会上,一个类人机器人为观众带来娱乐。

上个月,在中国东部南京举行的机器人展览会上,一台人形机器人为观众带来娱乐。
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images

北京还希望将资源用于经济和工业的高科技转型。这是政府 2025 年议程的另一个关键部分,也是习近平的长期目标,与美国总统不同,习近平的领导不受任期限制。

北京正在推动人工智能、机器人、6G 和量子计算领域的创新,宣布成立国家支持的基金来支持技术创新,甚至欢迎外国企业参与其中——这对习近平来说是一个重大的语气转变。

特朗普政府第一届运动旨在将其技术冠军华为排除在全球移动网络之外,拜登政府努力说服盟友加入其切断中国获得先进半导体的渠道,中国仍在为此感到痛心。

上个月,华盛顿表示正在考虑扩大对美国在中国敏感技术投资的限制。

但北京本周也宣称,无论面临何种障碍,它都有信心继续前进。

中国外交部长王毅周五对记者表示:“无论是太空科学还是芯片制造,外部无理打压从未停止。但哪里有封锁,哪里就有突破;哪里有打压,哪里就有创新。”

“我们正目睹中国成为科技强国的前景日益广阔,”他说。

美国总统唐纳德·特朗普(图为白宫椭圆形办公室)已将关税作为其经济政策的基石。

特朗普威胁?

特朗普的政策将对中国造成多大挑战,对北京来说仍然是一个悬而未决且紧迫的问题。

到目前为止,美国总统还没有像他在竞选期间威胁的那样对中国进口产品征收 60% 或以上的关税。

他的注意力集中在其他方面,包括对中国实施全面制裁。

通过削减美国的对外援助、威胁控制其他国家的主权领土、颠覆美国在欧洲的联盟,同时以牺牲乌克兰为代价与俄罗斯走得更近,从而挑战美国的全球领导地位。

此次变动对北京来说存在潜在风险。例如,如果华盛顿与莫斯科的和解使习近平远离他最亲密的盟友俄罗斯总统弗拉基米尔·普京,或者如果美国减少在欧洲的安全措施,使其能够加大对亚洲的关注。

但中国外交官也一直在利用这些变化来宣传中国是一个负责任和稳定的全球领导者,尽管北京自身在亚洲的咄咄逼人行为受到批评。

“大国应该履行国际义务,履行应尽的责任。它不应该把私利置于原则之上,更不应该用权力欺负弱者,”外交部长王毅周五在回答 CNN 关于特朗普“美国优先”政策的问题时表示。他补充道,中国“坚决反对强权政治和霸权主义”。

观察人士表示,在关税问题上,北京正试图缓和其反应,等待习近平和特朗普举行会晤,甚至可能达成一项避免贸易战升级的协议。

上个月,一艘载有液化天然气的油轮驶入中国山东省东部的一个港口。

上个月,一艘载有液化天然气的油轮驶入中国山东省东部的一个港口。

特写中国/美联社

尽管中国今年立即对美国征收的两套关税进行了反击,包括对美国能源和主要农产品征收关税,但其报复措施仍保持谨慎。

中国对美国的贸易逆差意味着,如果贸易战升级,中国将没有多少反击空间,但预计北京方面正在考虑其他措施,例如出口管制,以作为筹码。

而部分人士认为,即使关税给中国经济带来短期痛苦,从长远来看,受损的还是美国。中国仍然是全球供应链中不可或缺的一部分。数据显示,中国也比上一次做好了应对贸易战的准备,因为现在中国向全球更多市场出口商品。

“如果你与同等竞争对手玩(征收关税),效果实际上不如与小国或中等强国玩这个游戏好,”周小平在北京表示,他也是即将出版的《世界应该害怕中国吗?》一书的作者。

他说,中国想要合作而不是摩擦。

“但由于美国在这种关系中仍然占优势,(它将)决定这是哪种关系……所以中国必须说‘好吧——如果这必须是竞争,那么我们必须敢于战斗’,”他说。

China has a message for Trump: the US won’t stop its rise

Chinese leader Xi Jinping arrives at a plenary session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 8. 

 

 
Beijing, ChinaCNN — 

As US President Donald Trump ratcheted up economic pressure on China over the past week, Beijing sent back its own message: Its rise won’t be interrupted.

major political meeting taking place in the capital was the ideal backdrop for Beijing to respond. The “two sessions” gathering of China’s rubber-stamp legislature and its top political advisory body is where the government reveals its plans and sets the tone for the year ahead.

The top item on its priority list? Boosting consumer demand to ensure China doesn’t need to rely on exports to power its vast but slowing economy. And the next: driving forward leader Xi Jinping’s bid to transform the country into a technological superpower, by ramping up investment and enlisting the private sector.

Beijing is making these moves as it prepares for what could be a protracted economic showdown with the United States. Trump doubled additional tariffs on all Chinese imports to 20% on Tuesday and has threatened more to come – as well as tighter controls on American investment in China.

“We can prevail over any difficulty in pursuing development,” China’s No. 2 official Li Qiang told thousands of delegates seated in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People at the opening meeting of the National People’s Congress Wednesday. The “giant ship of China’s economy” will “sail steadily toward the future,” he said.

A foreign ministry spokesperson was more direct when asked about trade frictions on Tuesday: “If the US insists on waging a tariff war, trade war, or any other kind of war, China will fight till the end,” he told reporters.

 

Members of China's political advisory body, known as the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, attend a meeting on March 4.

Members of China's political advisory body, known as the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, attend a meeting on March 4. 

 

And while Beijing’s priorities – and rhetoric – may echo those of years past, this time they are coming from a country that is starting to regain its swagger after being battered by its own Covid restrictions, a property sector crisis and by a tech war with the US.

“Confidence” has been an unofficial buzzword of the weeklong event, which ends Tuesday. It was used nearly a dozen times during a press conference held by China’s economic tsars on Thursday, splashed across state media coverage and included in a pointed reminder – that “confidence builds strength”– during the closing lines of Li’s nationally broadcast speech.

That optimism might be more aspiration than reality. Many in China are looking to the future with uncertainty. They’re more willing to save than spend, while young people are struggling to find jobs and feeling unsure whether their lives will be better than those of their parents.

But unlike last year, the country is entering 2025 buoyed by the market-moving successes of Chinese firms and technology. And while Trump’s return has Beijing concerned about economic risks, it’s also eyeing opportunity for its own rise.

“By the end of Trump’s second term, America’s global standing and credibility image will have gone down,” People’s Liberation Army Sen. Col. (ret) Zhou Bo, a senior fellow at Tsinghua University’s Center for International Security and Strategy in Beijing, told CNN. “And as American strength declines, China, of course, will look more important.”

 

An electric vehicle by Chinese manufacturer BYD is loaded on a ship in the southeastern Chinese port city of Guangzhou last month.

An electric vehicle by Chinese manufacturer BYD is loaded on a ship in the southeastern Chinese port city of Guangzhou last month. 

 

Confidence boost

This mood isn’t just percolating in the halls of power.

On the streets of the capital, gleaming homegrown electric vehicles weave through traffic, including those from carmaker BYD, which now goes toe-to-toe with Elon Musk’s Tesla for global sales – a reminder of China’s successful push to become a leader in green tech.

Then there’s the box office record-smashing animation “Ne Zha 2” and the breakout success of privately owned Chinese AI firm DeepSeek. Its large language model shocked Silicon Valley and upended Western assumptions about the costs associated with AI.

In Beijing this week, “you can ask DeepSeek” has been a playful and proud punchline in casual conversation.

“Last year, people may have been impacted by the US narrative that China is declining, that China has peaked,” said Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of International Affairs at Renmin University in Beijing. “We still have many difficulties. We still have many problems, of course, but it’s not that we’ve reached peak China.”

Even Trump’s focus on economic rivalry with Beijing as he rolls out tariffs on US trade partners appears to some as a mark of how far China has come. On a recent weekday afternoon in downtown Beijing, some passersby interviewed by CNN pointed to competition with the US as a sign of their country’s growing strength.

“China is developing quickly now and that’s attracted international attention, especially from the United States,” but that may not be a bad thing, said a medical graduate student surnamed Xia. “Trump’s increase on tariffs is competition … (and) if there’s no competition maybe China’s independent development is not sustainable.”

 

Security personnel stand outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing as China's "Two Sessions" gets underway.

Security personnel stand outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing as China's "Two Sessions" gets underway. 

 

High stakes rivalry

But even as Chinese officials seek to project confidence, international observers say the economic stimulus measures announced this week show Beijing is girding itself for major challenges to come.

Premier Li alluded to that in his opening address. “The external environment is becoming more complex and severe, which may have a greater impact on the country’s trade, science and technology and other fields,” he said.

China doesn’t want to deal with that volatility while also grappling with a weak economy at home. That’s one reason why it’s trying to boost consumption and spur growth, setting an ambitious expansion target of “around 5%” this year. Beijing is also aware that trade frictions mean the economy needs to rely less on exports.

“It is likely that Beijing has thought through the scenarios of Trade War 2.0, but whatever happens, it is clear that China’s growth will have to rely more on domestic demand,” said Bert Hofman, a professor at the East Asian Institute at the National University Singapore and former World Bank country director for China, in a note.

Still, some analysts say Beijing’s initiatives are short on details and much less aggressive than needed to rev up the economy and boost consumer confidence.

“It adds up to a sense by the leadership that they want to refocus on growth and development, but still a desire to do only as much as necessary in terms of stimulus to get there,” said Michael Hirson, a fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis.

Xi may also be balancing this goal with another concern: a need to save some firepower to support the economy if China faces “a nasty four years dealing with Donald Trump,” he said.

 

A humanoid robot entertains the crowd at a robotics exhibition in eastern China's Nanjing last month.

A humanoid robot entertains the crowd at a robotics exhibition in eastern China's Nanjing last month. 

Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images

Beijing also wants to direct resources toward the high-tech transformation of its economy and industries. That’s another key part of the government’s 2025 agenda – and a long-term objective of Xi, who unlike US presidents is not subject to term limits on his leadership.

Beijing is pushing for innovations in AI, robotics, 6G and quantum computing, announcing a state-backed fund to support tech innovation and even welcoming foreign enterprises – in a significant tone shift for Xi – to play a role.

China is still smarting from the first Trump administration’s campaign to keep its tech champion Huawei out of global mobile networks and from the Biden administration’s efforts to convince allies to join it in cutting Chinese access to advanced semiconductors.

Last month, Washington said it was considering expanding restrictions on US investment in sensitive technologies in China.

But Beijing this week has also touted its confidence in advancing no matter the barriers.

“Be it space science or chip making, unjustified external suppression has never stopped,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters Friday. “But where there is blockade, there is breakthrough; where there is suppression, there is innovation.”

“We are witnessing an ever-expanding horizon for China to become a science and technology powerhouse,” he said.

 

US President Donald Trump, pictured here in the White House's oval office, has made tariffs a cornerstone of his economic policy.

US President Donald Trump, pictured here in the White House's oval office, has made tariffs a cornerstone of his economic policy. 

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Trump threat?

How much Trump’s policies will challenge China remains an open and urgent question for Beijing.

The US president has refrained so far from slapping Chinese imports with the blanket 60% or more tariffs that he had threatened on the campaign trail.

He’s been focused elsewhere, including on unleashing sweeping changes to US global leadership by decimating US foreign assistance, threatening to take control of other countries’ sovereign territory, and upending US alliances in Europe, while pulling closer to Russia at the expense of Ukraine.

There are potential risks for Beijing in that shake-up. For example, if a Washington-Moscow rapprochement pulls Xi away from Russian President Vladimir Putin, his closest ally, or if an American dial-down of security in Europe allows it to ramp up attention on Asia.

But Chinese diplomats have also been taking advantage of the changes to play up their country as a responsible and stable global leader, despite criticisms of Beijing’s own aggressive behavior in Asia.

“A big country should honor its international obligations and fulfill its due responsibilities. It should not put selfish interests before principles, still less should it wield the power to bully the weak,” Wang, the foreign minister, said on Friday in response to a question from CNN on Trump’s “America First” policy. China “resolutely opposes power politics and hegemony,” he added.

When it comes to tariffs, observers say Beijing is trying to moderate its response, holding out for a potential meeting between Xi and Trump or perhaps even a deal that could avert an escalating trade war.

A tanker carrying liquefied natural gas sails into a port eastern China's Shandong province last month.

A tanker carrying liquefied natural gas sails into a port eastern China's Shandong province last month. 

FeatureChina/AP

While China immediately retaliated against two sets of US tariffs this year, including with levies on US energy and key agricultural goods, it has remained measured in its reprisals.

The country’s deficit with the US means it will have less room to hit back if a trade war escalates, but Beijing is expected to be calculating other measures like export controls that it could use for leverage.

And the view from some parts is that even if tariffs cause the Chinese economy short-term pain, it will be the US which loses in the long run. China is still an indispensable part of global supply chains. It’s also better prepared to weather this trade war than the last one, because it’s sending goods to more markets globally now, data show.

“If you play (imposing tariffs) with a peer competitor, it actually would not work that well compared to if you’re doing this with small countries or medium powers,” said Zhou in Beijing, who is also the author of the forthcoming book “Should the World Fear China?”.

China, he said, wants cooperation not friction.

“But since the US is still the stronger side in this relationship, (it will) decide which kind of relationship this is … so China has to say ‘OK – if this has to be to be one of competition, then we must dare to fight,’” he said.

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