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More Americans View China As ‘Enemy’ As Trust In Xi Deteriorates

The survey of more than 3,500 US adults, which was taken in late March and published Wednesday, also found that 83% of respondents had “unfavorable opinions” of China.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>More Americans View China as ‘Enemy’ as Trust in Xi Deteriorates</p></div>
More Americans View China as ‘Enemy’ as Trust in Xi Deteriorates

Americans are increasingly seeing China as an “enemy” of the US rather than a competitor, reflecting growing public skepticism over the ability for the world’s two largest economies to cooperate, according to a new survey by the Pew Research Center.

Some 38% of respondents to the survey labeled China as an “enemy,” up 13 percentage points from last year. More than half those polled described China as a “competitor,” while just 6% said the country was a “partner” of the US. 

The survey of more than 3,500 US adults, which was taken in late March and published Wednesday, also found that 83% of respondents had “unfavorable opinions” of China — up one percentage point from 2022. The Pew report drew upon focus groups conducted in Virginia late last year, too.

More Americans View China As ‘Enemy’ As Trust In Xi Deteriorates

“People are broadly concerned about China’s role in the world,” the Pew researchers wrote in the report, which also highlighted worries about Chinese President Xi Jinping’s relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the aftermath of the ongoing Ukraine war. “Few Americans have confidence in Xi to do the right thing in world affairs – including nearly half who say they have no confidence at all in him.”

The report underscores the worsening US-China relationship, which soured during the Trump administration with the trade war and was further strained during the pandemic, which former President Donald Trump called a “Chinese plague.” The nations also tussled over allegations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang and the crackdown on political freedoms in Hong Kong.

Ties have continued to deteriorate under President Joe Biden, with Xi in March accusing the US of “containment” over China’s technological advances. An alleged Chinese spy balloon was also shot down over American skies recently, prompting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to call off his visit to China. 

Taiwan has been another pain point: Meetings between President Tsai Ing-wen’s and major US political leaders have led Beijing to up military pressure on the island. Beijing sees the democracy as part of its territory, and concerns about a potential conflict have been growing. 

The Pew survey found that 47% of respondents think tensions between China and Taiwan are “very serious,” a record high share. Some 62% of those surveyed also cited the China-Russia partnership as a “very serious” issue, too. 

Nearly half of the survey’s respondents now see the US as the world’s leading economic power while only about 40% see China on top — a marked change from last year, when opinion was divided equally between the two. 

Even so, around eight in 10 Americans said economic competition with China was at least a “somewhat serious” problem.” 

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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