Jack Ma calls the trade war the ‘most stupid thing’

The Chinese billionaire said it was pointless to target the Asian nation, which is on course to be a major consumer of foreign goods

Alibaba Group co-founder and Executive Chairman Jack Ma attends a forum at the first China International Import Expo (CIIE) in Shanghai, China November 5, 2018. Picture taken November 5, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer  ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. CHINA OUT.
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Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma called fighting over trade senseless and decried once again a widening conflict between the United States and China.

China’s richest person - who warned just last month that a trade war could last two decades - argued it was pointless to target goods because the Asian nation was on its way to becoming a major buyer of foreign products. Indeed, it is services - such as those on the internet - powering job growth, not old-school manufacturing, the outgoing Alibaba Group chairman told a business forum on Monday.

Mr Ma, whose online commerce empire is China’s largest corporation, has been a vocal opponent of tit-for-tat tariffs imposed on hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of US-Chinese goods. US President Donald Trump is now exerting pressure on the Asian country to wind back its $423 billion trade surplus with the world. While the American president has floated the possibility of a deal when he meets his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, in coming weeks. The two countries remain far apart on everything from market access to government support for state-run enterprises.

“Trade war is the most stupid thing in this world,” Mr Ma said at the China International Import Expo in Shanghai. Mr Jinping, who addressed attendees in the morning, is touting the forum as a major showcase of the country’s purchasing power.

Mr Ma’s comments come as Alibaba is on the verge of kicking off its most important annual shopping event Singles’ Day on November 11, an online bargains extravaganza that often has a heavy foreign commerce component.

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While Alibaba gets most of its revenue from domestic commerce, Mr Ma and his fellow executives have championed China as a destination for foreign-made products - American or otherwise. The company hosts major brands like Nike and Urban Outfitters on websites such as Tmall Global that showcase international merchandise for local consumers.

“It is the greatest challenge for China” to transform itself into an importing nation, Mr Ma said. But that is also “the greatest opportunity for the world".

In October, Mr Ma told World Trade Organisation delegates that the Geneva-based body has come under threat from Mr Trump’s efforts to recast the international trading system in a way that he says will be more balanced toward the US. The American president has this year targeted allies and adversaries alike, threatening tariffs on all of China’s exports, proposing levies on European car-makers and saying he could leave the WTO, which he has described as “unfair".

Mr Ma, who is planning on retiring next year, has also said the global business community is opposed to the trade war. Roche chairman Christoph Franz was among those who echoed Mr Ma’s comments earlier this week.

“Swiss wealth is entirely created by open borders and trade, and that can serve as a lighthouse to other countries,” Mr Franz told the same forum.