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Lessons in Chinese history as America shuts off from the world: 做厙TV expert

Those who have studied history understand the importance of being engaged in the global economy.

Two thousand years ago, China represented nearly 25 per cent of the global economy. In 1600, it was 30 per cent, and a third in 1820. The country was

There is a famous story from 1792 with a cargo of the latest European technologies to present to the Chinese emperor telescopes, globes, barometers, lenses, clocks, carriages, and other such things.

Historians report : There is nothing we lack we have never set much store on strange or ingenious objects, nor do we want any more of your countrys manufactures, thus reflecting his insular view.

A complicated set of factors, including weak Chinese leadership, internal conflict and a rejection of Western technology led to China turning inward and . This left China significantly weakened, and subject to invasion and

China down and out for more than a century

Chinas demise in the 1800s lasted for more than 100 years. It was not until the 1978 Chinese Communist Party that China re-emerged, allowing it access to Western markets and technology, thus providing economic growth and prosperity for the Chinese people.

Today, on a PPP (purchasing power parity) basis, as it was 200 years ago.

People monitor stock prices in Beijing in June 2018. China is back as a global economic powerhouse after an insular era spent in the shadows (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Interestingly, . Going forward, Chinas growth will likely slow as it will need to increasingly compete in industries in which there is much more protection.

This experience provides clear lessons for the United States.

The U.S. has been the worlds largest economy for the past 150 years. As journalist and author Fareed Zakaria noted in The Post-American World and the Rise of the Rest, its now a post-American era, where the U.S. is not falling, but other countries are closing the gap.

But Zakarias book was published before the rise of Trump and the insular and protectionist sentiment sweeping America.

Trump rejects access to global economy

The first tangible action of the Trump administration that pushed the U.S. towards an isolationist stance was his , a trade agreement that would give the U.S. access to an enormous share of the global economy.

Donald Trump would be wise to heed the lessons of Chinese history as he shuts off the United States from the rest of the world (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Trump has also ordered a , and into the U.S., prompting swift retaliatory action from the Europeans and Canadians. And now there is a very real possibility of a An all-out trade war seems increasingly likely, with dangerous economic and political ramifications for the United States and the world economy.

Also, and remarkably amid tensions with North Korea, Trump has also forced more protectionist dimensions into the U.S.s .

Trumps views that such agreements allow the rest of the world to benefit at the expense of the U.S. is so very wrong these are not zero sum agreements. His moves to limit immigration are another dimension in his insular and protectionist vision for the U.S.

Reminiscent of China

Closing the U.S. off to the rest of the world is reminiscent of China more than 200 years ago. Of course, the circumstances are very different and its a different age. Nevertheless, leading economies of the world must be fully engaged in the global economy, both economically and politically.

Its time for Trump and his supporters to understand that it is inconsistent to be a global power and protectionist.

The United States must remain open to trade, investment, immigration and the free flow of ideas. It must remain fully engaged in international institutions such as the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank  being a superpower is about both hard and soft power.

There is a clear contradiction between make America great again and closing off from the world. If the U.S. closes itself to the world, its future as a world leader in every way is at significant risk.

 is an associate professor of international business at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.

This article was originally published on . Read the .

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