Search results for china (612)
Showing 612 results, ordered by relevance | Order by date
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TPP Panic: Playing the China Card
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News from EPI › U.S. Lags Behind China, Japan, and Germany in Export Performance
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U.S.-China Trade Deficits Cost Millions of Jobs, with Losses in Every State and in All but One Congressional District
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Trade with China Cost 3.2 Million U.S. Jobs
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News from EPI › Growing Trade Deficit with China has Cost 3.2 Million U.S. Jobs Since 2001
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China Trade, Outsourcing and Jobs: Growing U.S. trade deficit with China cost 3.2 million jobs between 2001 and 2013, with job losses in every state
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News from EPI › Congressman Tim Ryan to Discuss New EPI Research on Jobs Lost to Trade with China
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Jack Lew Sees No Evil: Treasury Fails To Name China as a Currency Manipulator for the 12th Time
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Maybe China’s Currency Isn’t Undervalued—Really?
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US China Economic and Security Review Commission: Hearing on “U.S.-China Economic Challenges”
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Hearing on U.S.–China Economic Challenges: The impact of U.S.–China trade
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U.S. Goods Trade Deficits with China Increased by $3.3 Billion in 2013, and by $3.5 Billion with Countries in the Proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership
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Another Apple Supplier in China Admits Gross Violations of Worker Rights
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Apple Ignores Code of Conduct as Factory Workers in China Work Illegal, Excessive Overtime
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News from EPI › Media Advisory: The Effects of China Trade on U.S. Workers and the Economy
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Displaced Minority Workers Suffered 29.6 Percent Drop in Wages from the Growing Trade Deficit with China
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News from EPI › Growing trade deficit with China cost the U.S. economy $37.0 billion in lost wages in 2011
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Trading away the manufacturing advantage: China trade drives down U.S. wages and benefits and eliminates good jobs for U.S. workers
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Complacent Consensus on China
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News from EPI › The OECD-WTO’s new measures of value-added accounting significantly and inaccurately underestimate China’s trade surplus with the United States
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Value-Added Analysis of Trade with China Could Weaken Fair Trade Enforcement and Increase Job Loss
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U.S. trade deficit declined in 2012, but goods trade deficits with China, and in non-petroleum products, rose sharply
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Reducing U.S. trade deficits will generate a manufacturing-based recovery for the United States and Ohio: Ending currency manipulation by China and others is the place to start
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Heritage Foundation’s view on China trade and jobs is like old wine that’s aged badly
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More reasons why China’s currency should remain a live issue
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No, we don’t need China to finance budget deficits
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House Republicans block remedy for China’s job-killing currency intervention
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Growing U.S. trade deficit with China cost over 2.7 million jobs
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Apple in China: Failing to make good on its commitment?
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News from EPI › Growing U.S. trade deficit with China cost 2.7 million jobs between 2001 and 2011