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US Risks Losing Its Pension Funds in China: Expert

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The United States risks losing its pension funds in China as the regime seeks to undermine the economic base of America, warned Gregory Copley, president of the International Strategic Studies Association.

Billionaire investor Mark Mobius recently said that the Chinese regime has taken “very significant” action to prevent him from withdrawing capital from Chinese equities since his HSBC account is situated in Shanghai.

“I can’t get an explanation of why they’re doing this. It’s just amazing. They’re putting [up] all kinds of barriers,” Mobius told the Fox Business Network on March 2. “They don’t say, ‘No, you can’t get your money out,’ but they say, ‘Give us all the records from 20 years of how you’ve made this money’ and so forth. It’s crazy.”

Copley told NTD’s “China in Focus”: “There’s a global fiction abroad at the moment, which is that the economy in the People’s Republic of China is in for a soft landing. It’s not going to be that soft. It’s going to be one which has worldwide ramifications because it will cut into the pension funds, particularly of people around the world but particularly the retirees in the United States.”

BlackRock, the world’s largest investment manager, is the first foreign-owned company to receive a license to operate in China’s $3.5 trillion mutual fund industry, Forbes reported.

Meanwhile, many state governments in the United States have invested their pension funds with BlackRock. According to a 2021 report (pdf) from Consumers’ Research, Washington, Florida, and New York were the top three investors, investing $13.8 billion, $10.7 billion, and $9.8 billion, respectively,

Undermining the West Amid Economic Woes

According to the expert, “China is basically in a very, very weak economic position.”

“There’s no evidence that the private sector itself is stimulating growth or that there is a growth in consumer demand. Quite the contrary, people are very, very gun-shy after the events of the last couple of years, and are not spending in the way the [Chinese] Communist Party had projected,” he said.

“The major sectors of the economy, and particularly the property sector, look unlikely to revive at best,” he added.

Copley noted that China is heavily dependent on food imports. In 2022, China imported more than 85 percent of its soybeans (95 million tons), mainly from the United States, Brazil, and Argentina.

And thus, he said, it is hard for China to build up an internal marketplace that “will be enough to stimulate economic growth and operations.”

Copley believes that Chinese leader Xi Jinping has realized that his ability to outgrow the West, and particularly the United States, economically and strategically, is now very difficult.

“So he must resort to undermining the economic and strategic base of his adversaries, particularly the United States,” he said, referring to the capital crackdown.

“So the view is, if China cannot grow strategically enough to defeat the West, then the West must be reduced by indirect means economically, politically, and so on, so that the West becomes economically deprived and politically unstable,” he said.

“And so that’s really the very, very poor option base, which Xi Jinping has available to him,” he added.

Deterring Invasion of Taiwan

Copley noted that Xi could launch an invasion of Taiwan to shift blame for the country’s economic turmoil and urge the United States and its allies to take steps to deter it.

“The United States needs to demonstrate a greater physical commitment to supporting the Taiwanese Republic of China forces,” he said.

“Other countries, such as Australia, must show more open support militarily for Taiwan,” he added.

“It’s critical that the United States and its allies show real resolve in letting Xi Jinping know that an open war is not an option, which is viable, and showing that an open war is something that he absolutely will lose, and it will cost him his party and probably his life,” Copley said.

Andrew Moran and Frank Fang contributed to this report.

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