Sino-U.S. Relations in the Post-Cold War Era
Today, China and the United States are inextricably linked in the modern world and some observers maintain that any disagreements that emerge between the two countries are relatively insignificant and will not adversely affect this growing economic and political relationship. By contrast, other international analysts argue that recent trends in China's economic and military growth will inevitably result in armed conflict between these two superpowers. To determine the facts, this paper provides a discussion concerning the accuracy of these respective viewpoints concerning the status of Sino-U.S. relations in the post-Cold War era, followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
China's development in the 20th century
The 20th century was a turbulent one for China, marred by major famines, foreign occupation and civil unrest.[footnoteRef:1] Despite these problems and the enormous challenges in achieving self-sufficiency in food production, the country emerged in the latter part of the second half of the century as a burgeoning economic juggernaut.[footnoteRef:2] Indeed, China's economy has grown so rapidly that analysts with the International Monetary Fund project that it will outpace the United States to become the world's largest economy by next year.[footnoteRef:3] Likewise, China has also assumed a global leadership position in many areas of manufacturing, including steel, electronics and textiles production.[footnoteRef:4] These trends indicate that China will soon replace the United States as the world's leading superpower, but economically rather than militarily, at least for the foreseeable future.[footnoteRef:5] [1: "China" (2015). CIA World Factbook. [online] available https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ch.html.] [2: Francis Shor, "Declining U.S. Hegemony and Rising Chinese Power: A Formula for Conflict?" PGDT 11 (2012), p. 158.] [3: Shor, "Declining U.S. Hegemony," p. 158.] [4: Shor, "Declining U.S. Hegemony," p. 158.] [5: Alan Philips, "Handshake That Ended the Cold War," The World Today (2014, December), 70(6), p. 38.]
These predictions are further supported by other trends, including the rapid growth of gross China's domestic product (GDP) and purchasing power parity (PPP) as well as its relentless economic growth which has averaged 10% a year since 2013, the fastest rate in the developed world.[footnoteRef:6] Indeed, several years of sustained trade surpluses with the U.S. have resulted in China's accumulating a $4 trillion financial reserve of hard currency assets.[footnoteRef:7] Other indications of China's growing hegemony with respect to the U.S. include its increased exports and imports, ranking its second only after the U.S., and while the U.S. remains the global leader in some areas, China is quickly overtaking in others such as manufacturing output. Moreover, as a result of new free trade agreements with countries such as Pakistan and Switzerland, the domestic market in China has also increased rapidly in recent years.[footnoteRef:8] Taken together, these trends underscore the dynamic nature of Sino-U.S. relations in the post-Cold War era, and the background and current status of this relationship are discussed further below. [6: "China economic profiles," (2015) NationMaster. [online] available: http://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/profiles/China/Economy.] [7: Robert G. Vambery, "The Rise of the Renminbi from Convertible toward Reserve Currency Status as a Result of the China-Us Trade Relationship," Journal of Global Business and Technology 10 (Fall 2014) 2, p. 43.] [8: "China economic profiles," p. 4.]
2. Overview of U.S.-Sino relations in the Post-Cold War Era.
While U.S.-Sino relations remained challenged by disagreements over human rights issues and other major areas of disagreement since the 1990s as discussed further below, China has increasingly engaged the international community as a member of international organizations and adopted a more pragmatic view towards reconciling its differences with the United States because the country's leadership recognizes the centrality of this relationship to achieving their economic and political goals.[footnoteRef:9] Nevertheless, Clover, Dyer and Ma emphasize that, "Almost nowhere else do you see such a strategic rivalry that now exists between China and the U.S."[footnoteRef:10] This strategic rivalry has translated into increasingly cooperative initiatives on the one hand and growing areas of contention on the other. For example, the director of the China studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, David Lampton, argues that, "Our relations with China have been, and will remain for the foreseeable future to be mixed, to be a complex combination of cooperation and contention."[footnoteRef:11] [9: Jonathan E. Davis, "From Ideology to Pragmatism: China's Position on Humanitarian Intervention in the Post-Cold War Era," Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (2011, March), 44(2), p. 217.] [10: Charles Clover, Geoff Dyer, and Fangjing Ma, "Head to head," Financial Times (2014, July 12), p. 1.] [11: David Lampton, "The U.S.-China Relationship," PBS Frontline. [online] available:...
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