Adjunct Professor Matt Gold was quoted in an Associated Press article about U.S.-China trade relations.
American farmers could be evicted from a lucrative market for their goods. U.S. companies, from Caterpillar to Qualcomm, would likely face obstruction from regulators in China, a market they rely on for an outsize share of sales.
The standoff, mostly over China’s sharp-elbowed drive to supplant U.S. technological dominance, threatens to tip “the U.S. and China into a downward spiral like the world hasn’t seen since the trade war that plunged us deeper in in the Great Depression and into the Second World War,” warned Matt Gold, adjunct professor of international trade law at the Fordham Law School and a former U.S. trade official.
The article also ran in the [Honolulu Star Advertiser].