Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States China

Alibaba's Jack Ma Backs Down From Promise To Trump To Bring 1 Million Jobs to the US (cnbc.com) 145

Jack Ma, chairman of Alibaba, has abandoned a promise to create one million new jobs in the US, in a sign of the threat that rising trade tensions with China pose to some of US President Donald Trump's key economic goals. From a report: "The promise was made on the premise of friendly US-China partnership and rational trade relations," Ma told Chinese news site Xinhua on Wednesday. "That premise no longer exists today, so our promise cannot be fulfilled." Ma, who recently announced that he will step down as Alibaba chairman within a year, added that the company would "not stop working hard to contribute to the healthy development of China-US trade." Ma's comments come on the heels of a new round of tariffs this week from both China and the U.S. that will affect billions of dollars worth of goods as the two countries have failed to reach a deal to resolve the Trump administration's concerns about China's trade practices.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Alibaba's Jack Ma Backs Down From Promise To Trump To Bring 1 Million Jobs to the US

Comments Filter:
  • Quick survey: (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mujadaddy ( 1238164 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @03:48PM (#57344230)
    What was the last high-profile promise you can remember actually being fulfilled?
    • Well he said we'd have a great relationship with Russia. And while he didn't quite ban all immigration, he sure took a big shit on the legal ones.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Obamacare. AC to prevent point loss.
      • Why AC to prevent point loss? The side of the aisle supporting Obamacare and thrashing Trump has the podium simply because they are so militant and control the most popular news media.

        Without the public option Obamacare was not a kept promise, the public option WAS the promise. You can argue we should have public healthcare, you can argue we shouldn't have public healthcare but either way Obamacare is a bastardized hybrid that has skyrocketed healthcare costs and gutted insurance coverage to the point of be
    • Re:Quick survey: (Score:4, Informative)

      by rahvin112 ( 446269 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @04:41PM (#57344600)

      Anyone that knew Ma's history would have known he was blowing smoke up the skirt of anyone that would listen.

      Ma was a prime example of the dirty business practices of the Chinese conglomerates.

      • Ma is that rich, he's gonna buy slashdot and track you down
  • by bogaboga ( 793279 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @03:52PM (#57344260)

    "That premise no longer exists today, so our promise cannot be fulfilled."

    I have a hunch that the USA no longer has that clout it once had. Countries are now openly willing to defy the USA.

    Some countries are already trying to kill the dollar [forbes.com]

    let me hope our president will change course, though I have no doubt that some folks will hope that he doubles down.

    • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @04:19PM (#57344456)

      "That premise no longer exists today, so our promise cannot be fulfilled."

      I have a hunch that the USA no longer has that clout it once had. Countries are now openly willing to defy the USA.

      Some countries are already trying to kill the dollar [forbes.com]

      let me hope our president will change course, though I have no doubt that some folks will hope that he doubles down.

      The US had plenty of clout, backed by a network of friends and allies that was unique in human history, and potentially still is mostly salvageable. That network of allies has always been the USA's strength because everybody knew that whatever the Americans got up to they'd always be better of with those occasionally crazy Yanks than the Soviets/Russians or the Chinese. The US' position would still be unassailable if Trump wasn't busy throwing away that clout and methodically disassembling the network of friends and allies. There is a whole slew of Asian countries now cozying up to China but not necessarily because they want to. With the Trump administration adopting a policy of insulting everybody and isolating the US, they have no choice but to cozy up to China. Most of them would much prefer the US, it usually offer a better deal and, (key point here) the USA is a distant hegemon, far across the ocean. You can't drive American tanks to Asia from the continental US and amphibious operations are very expensive and hard to do right. You can, however, easily drive Chinese tanks from bases in China to most of these Asian countries and they are only too keenly aware of it. Most of them have watched China claim the south China sea to the extent that you can stand on a beach at the water's edge in some of the countries in the region and send a golden arc of piss into what China regards as its sacred territorial waters.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @05:45AM (#57346956) Homepage Journal

        A great example of this is what happened with TPP. When the US pulled out the other countries decided to continue on their own with CPTPP, basically the same thing but without the US. They dropped all the stuff that the US wanted by they didn't of course.

        So now they have this huge trade deal with 11 countries and the US is trying to do individual deals with each of them. Of course they don't want to do individual deals, the whole point of doing a collective one was that no single country could make demands without broader agreement. And of course, that's why Trump didn't like it, he thought he could do better individual deals and force countries to agree to them.

        What has actually happened is that the CPTPP signatories are just stalling with the US, waiting for Trump to go away. Japan doesn't want to lower automotive standards to allow more US cars to be sold there, and doesn't want to lower food standards to allow US meat products to be sold (like the EU they don't allow chlorine washing for example).

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The really sad thing is that you did this to yourselves and you have been doing it for at least the last 15-20 years.

      You've been running the US in the same as you've been running your corporations - only thinking about the next quarter and doing very little investment for the longer term.

      Unfortunately, what is happening to the US now is also what happens to corporations run in this way - you rot from within while running on inertia for a time (which maintains the illusion that everything is running ok - at

      • by Anonymous Coward
        Unfortunately, this is happening, because corporation run the US.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @05:07PM (#57344754)

      For hundreds of year the Gold Standard (and by default the British Pound) were the standard for international Trade, simply because the Pound was backed by the gold reserves.

      There was no US dollar from the Federal Reserve until 1913.

      During WWII, the USA demanded payment from the UK etc in Gold, so by default the US ended up with the majority of Gold Reserves. It was in the 1950's when world trade was again taking off that the US$ became the standard (because of the gold they had). At this stage the USA also accounted for over 60% of the entire worlds GDP.

      Today the USA accounts for about 19% of the worlds GDP (and falling), not because the USA failed, but because the rest of the world succeeded , it had rebuilt from WWII (something the US did not have to do). The USA is only 4% of the worlds population, so all other things being equal the USA could fall to 4% of the worlds GDP.

      The rest of the world is starting to see the USA as a bully and wants the world to shift away from the USA and it politics dominating their countries and economies.
      The Euro is a good example of this, though more needs to be done to equalise and stabilise the individual countries within the federation.
      It is likely that China (if not already) will become the worlds biggest economy shortly, Trump is only accelerating this as other countries also believe the need to reduce dependance on the USA and are actively seeking trade agreements with each other, and in particular the Asian economies (which account for over 60% of the worlds population).

      Trump said "Trade wards are easy to win", this also means "Trade wars are easy to loose" , Trump lacks any real understanding of world economics, international trade, all indications are people who have to deal with him believe he is an idiot. He is souring international relationships on an almost daily basis. This means he is far more likely to loose the war than win it. Shouting " USA USA USA" will not change this, and the cracks and failures in Welfare, Education, Health, Freedom of Speech, Freedom of the Press, democracy, , etc etc are growing wider in the USA (go search for USA world rankings on these measures).

      The USA leads the worlds spending on the military , and seems to frequently use it, not so much to protect US citizens but to protect US corporate interests (Oil, etc). Perception is everything, and the worlds perception of the USA is falling .

    • China's been trying to kill the dollar for almost a decade now. It hasn't been working, because no matter how strained US/EU or US/OPEC relations get, everyone knows the US doesn't use the dollar's bully power and China would if the yuan replaced it.

      And Russia... isn't a big economic player.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Align yourself with Big Giant Orange Head and watch everything go off the rails. Who could have seen it coming?

    So much winning.

  • wow! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fattmatt ( 1042156 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @03:54PM (#57344278)

    Wow, the promise of 1 million jobs selling cheap consumer products. Now that's a recipe for a healthy economy.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @03:58PM (#57344294)

    Making more things here makes *more* sense with the tariffs in place than without, since companies would not be paying tariffs on things built here... so there's something else at work.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      True, but they'd be paying more to develop domestically because the infrastructure for developing certain kinds of products simply isn't as large in the USA as it is in China, and the inability to produce the same amount of goods due to lack of infrastructure would result in higher prices even if you completely leave labour costs out of the equation.
      • None of what you said appeared to be a problem (or was any less of a problem) when they made the initial promise.

        • by mark-t ( 151149 )

          Nowhere in the initial promise was it suggested that they would move jobs from China to the USA, only that they would bring jobs to the USA. The original plan would entail *expanding* capacity, not simply trying to move it to somewhere that can't do the job anywhere nearly as efficiently... even if they did move to the USA, productivity would be so abysmally low on account of lack of infrastructure that prices would go through the roof.

          It's cheaper, no matter how you slice it, to just make Americans pa

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Problem is the supply chain. To build stuff in the US you need a supply of parts from China, because the US doesn't build everything or doesn't build it at the right price.

      But now there are tariffs on those supplies. Not the end of the world for products sold in the US market, although the paperwork is a hidden cost and there is the uncertainty factor about what tariffs might appear in the future. They are a killer for anything exported from the US though, especially with other trade deals under threat with

    • Only if tariffs are on finished goods, but there are tariffs on supplies and raw materials which just screws everything up.
    • Making more things here makes *more* sense with the tariffs in place than without

      No it does not because you have forgotten that the tariffs are bi-directional. When the US imposes tariffs on goods the countries affected impose tariffs on US goods. If the rest of the world outside the US continues to remove trade barriers then because the non-US combined economy is far larger than the US one you will end up being far better off making your things outside the US than inside because you can then sell them without tariffs to far more people.

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

      Making more things here makes *more* sense with the tariffs in place than without, since companies would not be paying tariffs on things built here... so there's something else at work.

      Tarrifs are likely to increase the cost of living unless making things locally is very cheap, and if it was, they'd already be made there. Increasing the cost of living may be OK, if wages keep pace, assuming receipts from locally sourced goods are recycled quickly. There are a whole series of feedbacks, and my most was getting very long, so I've cut it down to just the above.

  • Before Trump (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Jarwulf ( 530523 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @03:59PM (#57344304)
    Slashdot economics experts: China has been bullying other countries economically for decades and unfairly favoring its own companies. We have to do something about it before its too late. The longer we wait the more painful it will be. After Trump ........ Slashdot economics experts: WAAA Trump did something China didn't like and they gave me a booboo. Waaa we must never offend china to keep cheap chinese goods forever!
    • by mujadaddy ( 1238164 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @04:05PM (#57344350)
      Are you day-drinking?
    • Jarwulf: I have so much confirmation bias that I only see what I want to see about Slashdot and somehow attribute my bias to some pro / anti trump pro / anti China agenda.

    • Re:Before Trump (Score:5, Informative)

      by TheSunborn ( 68004 ) <mtilsted@NoSPAm.gmail.com> on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @04:35PM (#57344560)

      Do something about it yes, but not start a trade war with the entire world at the same time.

      In order to win a trade war with China, USA need allies to help them put presure on China. Instead he said fuck you, to all the countries which would have been natural allies in such a trade war.

      • Re:Before Trump (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @09:42PM (#57345808)

        As a person who prefers to spend a little more to buy solidly built items that last, I don't really see any harm it would have if cheap imported crap was more expensive than it is now.

        Generally people who disfavor the trade scenario with China want less trade, because they do not see any chance of getting China to offer reciprocal rules for foreign businesses. Without that, without China allowing US businesses to operate in China with the freedom that Chinese businesses have to operate in the US, then reducing trade is the whole goal.

        In that sense it is very "winable." Many of the European conflicts have already been resolved.

        What I find funny is that a lot of people think it is only Trump supporters who want decreased trade with China, but I've been hearing the same thing from the left for 30 years about how "Free Trade" will ruin our economy for the little guy, and destroy the environment too. And on the right, the little guy has at least the same economic concerns. Neither party actually votes to support American workers or small business in trade negotiations, so it shouldn't really be that surprising that the little guy supports an anti-trade policy. Meaning, we want Trump to do a bad job dealing with trade with China! LOL

        Not every bad job pushes things in the wrong direction, once in awhile you slip on a banana peel and get saved from getting run over by car! Actually, in other cases he wanted to so something evil, but wasn't allowed by the courts merely because he did a bad job at implementing it. So, maybe even 35% of the screw-ups are useful.

        • As a person who prefers to spend a little more to buy solidly built items that last, I don't really see any harm it would have if cheap imported crap was more expensive than it is now.

          Your "solidly built items" are most likely also mostly made in China.

          China produces a lot of crap, but they are absolutely able to produce quality stuff, too. They just don't have the ability to sell quality products (mostly due to the total lack of known brands). And for the lack of a known brand name (which in turn gives a measure of quality - could be low, could be high, at least you have an idea of what quality level you can expect) the only thing they have left to compete on is price, and that in turn

    • Re:Before Trump (Score:4, Insightful)

      by barc0001 ( 173002 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @04:41PM (#57344596)

      The US (and the west) has spent decades integrating cheap Chinese goods into its economy. Trying to unwind that all at once is just a bad idea, even if it's necessary.

      Most of the criticism is being leveled at HOW it is being done, not that it needs doing. How it is being done is like you deciding you don't want to rely on China's dinghy that you're sitting in but instead of taking the oars and moving the dinghy to shore in a controlled fashion before getting out of it, you just take a chainsaw and cut it in half when you're 2 miles offshore.

      • I like your analogy, but to that I say 'sink or swim'. Decades have gone by, meanwhile the government has done nothing of merit to reverse the trend. Will it hurt? Maybe. Unfortunately, the chances are good that the corporate lobby will mitigate this by any means necessary. Ironic since it is mostly their greedy fault.
      • I can buy chainsaws made in the USA, chainsaws made in Europe, chainsaws made in Canada, chainsaws made in China.

        China competes on cheap products, but that isn't the same being integrated into the economy in a way that makes them important. The whole reason that the current trade policy is disruptive is because of the time it takes to arrange changes to industrial supply chains, not because China is important to manufacturing.

        Things like automobile production that have a lot of parts will suffer supply hicc

        • Re:Before Trump (Score:4, Informative)

          by CaffeinatedBacon ( 5363221 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @12:39AM (#57346320)

          Things like automobile production that have a lot of parts will suffer supply hiccups, but OTOH they're not really doing JIT manufacturing, most cars sit around on lots before even being transferred to the dealers, and the disruptions aren't as bad as they might sound on the tee-vee. The vast majority of products do not have that many parts. And none of it is exclusive to China. None of it.

          Car companies are deciding now [cnbc.com] what models they will release in 2022. They have to decide now, where to build the plants, where to get the supplies etc. not knowing which countries will have tariffs at what levels on which parts is extremely disruptive and costly.

          • You wave your hands about 2022, is that the year of the losses? Or do you have more apples and oranges in your analysis than data?

            If some of the plastic bits change cost, that doesn't matter very much in 2022, it affects everybody so it is not a meaningful disruption. Nobody will be going without a new car because of it.

            Modern manufacturing supply chains are supposed to be more flexible than historical ones, if that isn't true for an industry maybe they're doing it wrong and this experience will improve the

            • Maybe you should have just read the link and listened to the people who actually know.

              The escalating trade spat between the United States and China has impacted the autos sector with car-makers finding it increasingly tough to plan longer-term projects, a Daimler board member told CNBC on Wednesday.

              "The steel and aluminium prices skyrocketed in the United States, making our tax more expensive there," Martin Daum said, adding that the big concern is planning future projects.

              "These days, we talk about the products we are going to launch in 2022, 2023. We talk to our suppliers who have to invest heavily and they need stability to make those investment decisions."

              You wave you hands around talking about plastic bits. Who should we listen to...

            • Are you drunk?

              • It is somewhat telling that that is your first response to something you don't understand. I guess you spend a lot of times hanging out in bars?

    • the manufacturing jobs aren't coming back. Even if the factories do they'll have so much automation they're never going to employ the kinds of numbers they used to. There's multiple studies showing this. We've doubled our manufacturing output in the last 40 years while cutting our workforce by 1/3 ( source [youtube.com]).

      Thing is this is why Hilary didn't think it was much of an issue in the campaign. She's trapped in an iron bubble and she thought people would be reasonable about manufacturing jobs and just accept t
    • by m00sh ( 2538182 )

      Slashdot economics experts: China has been bullying other countries economically for decades and unfairly favoring its own companies. We have to do something about it before its too late. The longer we wait the more painful it will be. After Trump ........ Slashdot economics experts: WAAA Trump did something China didn't like and they gave me a booboo. Waaa we must never offend china to keep cheap chinese goods forever!

      This is cowardice and very un-American.

      We promote freedom, democracy, prosperity and pursuit of happiness.

      We're not goons who think in terms of having to do something about that guy.

      Don't let fear turn you into a coward.

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by quantaman ( 517394 )

      Slashdot economics experts: China has been bullying other countries economically for decades and unfairly favoring its own companies. We have to do something about it before its too late. The longer we wait the more painful it will be.

      After Trump ........
      Slashdot economics experts: WAAA Trump did something China didn't like and they gave me a booboo. Waaa we must never offend china to keep cheap chinese goods forever!

      China has also been giving other countries cheap good for decades, it wasn't necessarily a bad thing for those countries. It's made the US and other countries very rich in terms of material goods and freed up labour to do more productive things. It's not all great of course, not all of those jobs could be replaced and at some point China starts taking jobs you'd really prefer to keep and exerting influence in ways you don't like.

      But lets accept the premise that you do need to start pushing back against Chin

  • Since Trump and his merry band of spineless cowards have taken our economy to new heights, and we have acheived essentially full employment, adding 1 million jobs is not only not necessary, but counterproductive for the people Trump works for.

    A real math problem here

  • There was a documentation about usa in european tv, which I watched. Terrible news about infrastructure but the news about crystal meth and drug abuse was VERY worrying. A generation could break away about and their childs/children are not on a happy way. Somebody from another country promises jobs??? Trump does that aswell, it`s worriying.
    • sorry about grammar and mistakes
    • but the news about crystal meth and drug abuse was VERY worrying

      Crystal meth is no longer trendy among teenagers/20-year-olds. It's an old person drug. Heroin is the new choice.

      Good lord, I wish I was joking.

      I should point out this is based on statistics of people arrested, not personal experience

      • That's depressing. Is there a way to invent and provide soma that doesn't lead to a Brave New World dystopia? Or is this just our culture euthanizing the elements that have become redundant with increased automation?
        • It's more likely our culture having doctors (until recently?) proscribing tons of opiods, then people getting addicted, then the legal supply getting cut off. Then they turn to heroin because at least then they can get it.

          • Yeah I guess that's why I made the reference to soma, it seems like we either need to just let these people indulge themselves without the legal hurdles or provide better addiction treatment.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    He never had any chance of fulfilling that promise, so why not make a cheap jab at Trump.

    ( Wal-Mart employs around 1.4-1.5 million. )

  • Yet another nail in Hong Kong's independence coffin.

    • Hong Kong isn't independent now, wtf are you even talking about?

      They got 10 years of no new rules to arrange an orderly handover, any promises beyond that were already broken and the policies retracted long ago.

      You should seek access to news sources.

  • Mr. Ma has found a convenient way out of his promise he knew he'd never be able to keep. If it wasn't an excuse on trade relations, it would be the sky is too blue or the sun is orbiting in too predictable of an orbit.
  • Common man buys/appreciates Inexpensive and High quality products;
    Countries should amend their Constitutions accordingly;
    https://archive.st/archive/201... [archive.st]

If all else fails, lower your standards.

Working...