Matt Reynolds, a fellow in the Economics Program of the Center for Strategic & International Studies, and Matthew Goodman, a Senior Vice President at the Center, recently co-authored a paper on the ways in which China attempts to exert influence through economic coercion. Hear about their analysis of eight recent cases from Japan, Norway, the Philippines, Mongolia, South Korea, Australia, Canada, and Lithuania and learn about why it is that they believe that a common characteristic across all of these cases is that they were not successful in achieving China’s aims.
Listen to the counterstrategy Matthew and Matt recommend based around pre-emptive policies that would Deny China leverage and measures that would offer support to victims of economic coercion to Deflect China’s attacks.