ID | 177882 |
Title Proper | COVID-19 Effect |
Other Title Information | US-China Narratives and Realities |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ye, Min |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated geopolitical tensions between the United States and China while restricting policy dialogues, amplifying extreme sentiments, and sidestepping rational observations. The outcomes are extremist and divided narratives, emphasizing China's triumphalism on one hand and inherent weaknesses on the other. Under such narratives, China’s policy voices and actions in combatting the pandemic and economic fallout were under-studied and discounted, with harmful impacts on the US response to the virus, economic recession, and shifting globalization. This paper studies China’s official statements, research reports, and scholarly opinion networks in 2020 and finds that, though there were various policy discussions, the general argument was for expanding China’s globalism during and after the pandemic. Meanwhile, China’s policy actors—national agencies, local governments, and state-owned enterprises (SOEs)—strive to continue globalization and adapt to new realities after COVID-19. |
`In' analytical Note | Washington Quarterly Vol. 44, No.1; Spring 2021: p.89-105 |
Journal Source | Washington Quarterly Vol: 44 No 1 |
Key Words | US-China Relations ; COVID-19 Effect ; US-China Narratives |