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U.S. foreign policy is increasingly tangled in great power competition with China and Russia, coloring everything from trade policy to military alliances. Here is a rundown of our main challenges.
Washington wants to outcompete China and has an expansive policy agenda — including export controls on critical technologies and investments in domestic manufacturing — to prove it. In short, clipping Beijing’s wings has become the central organizing principle of U.S. foreign policy. It’s also the rare issue that unites D.C. Democrats and Republicans.
But the U.S. cannot succeed on its own. And many allies feel disadvantaged, particularly those who depend on exports to China or those who see U.S. efforts to onshore production of certain goods as a threat to their manufacturers.
The White House has managed some wins, including cooperation on chip-related export controls from countries such as the Netherlands, the country that makes the world’s most advanced machines for semiconductor lithography. Washington has also struck a deal with Japan that will make critical battery minerals produced in that country eligible for the tax incentives available to domestically produced ones. The agreement will be the template for another deal being negotiated with the EU.
The U.S. also relies on its allies to help arm Ukraine in its war with Russia, with stockpiles of ammunition and more running low on both sides of the Atlantic. But many European defense contractors are struggling to ramp up output, even with defense spending on the continent reaching levels ($345 billion) not seen since the Cold War.
One problem: Many European governments have not committed to purchasing an expanded supply of weapons, leading to fears they will pull back in a few years and leave manufacturers stranded with excess capacity. Meanwhile, even with recent increases, most members of the transatlantic NATO military alliance still don’t meet the minimum requirement of spending 2% of their GDP on defense. There’s hope the situation in Ukraine will change that, but much remains uncertain.
These issues converge in China’s increasingly close ties with Russia, a product of their shared interest in countering America’s global influence. Notably, both countries have made inroads in resource-rich regions, such as the Middle East, which accounts for nearly a third of global oil output, and sub-Saharan Africa, a vital source of clean-energy metals and minerals.
The question is how far their partnership can go. Washington still hopes it can repair relations with Beijing enough to cooperate on some issues, such as de-escalating the conflict in Ukraine, while still competing on others.
This forecast first appeared in The Kiplinger Letter, which has been running since 1923 and is a collection of concise weekly forecasts on business and economic trends, as well as what to expect from Washington, to help you understand what’s coming up to make the most of your investments and your money. Subscribe to The Kiplinger Letter.