WASHINGTON—The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is warning that rising tensions with China could have serious consequences for U.S. businesses, laying out a worse-case scenario where some major U.S. industries would be crippled.

Full decoupling—meaning a complete cutoff of sales to China—would cost the U.S. aircraft and aviation industry between $38 billion and $51 billion in sales annually, the report estimates. That would translate to between 167,000 and 225,000 jobs lost.

Similarly, an end to U.S. semiconductor sales to China would cost the industry $83 billion in revenue and 124,000 jobs, according to the report entitled “Understanding U.S.-China Decoupling.”

The scenarios laid out in the 88-page report envision a complete end to sales between the two intertwined economic superpowers—the kind of outcome that is only likely to happen in an all-out war.

Still, the Chamber argues, it is important to contemplate extreme cases as a way to focus policy makers on the costs involved in battling China.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Trump can’t get over 2020, which is why he won’t win in 2024

In four years, the Republican Party lost control of the White House,…

Biden says Gaza’s main hospital ‘must be protected’ as fears grow for trapped patients

31m ago / 9:55 AM UTC U.N. says trucks have run out…

Black Friday Crowds Are Back, but Face Inflation

Business More people are expected to return to stores after two years…

‘M3GAN’ is an internet star thanks to her TikTok-esque dance

Before she ever hit the big screen, M3GAN was a social media…