US-China trade war means 1 million US jobs pledge is off, Jack Ma says

He said the deal with President Donald Trump is no longer feasible because of the unstable trade situation

This photo taken on September 19, 2018 shows Alibaba founder Jack Ma delivering a speech during the 2018 Computing Conference in Hangzhou in China's eastern Zhejiang province. Ma said his ambitious pledge to create one million jobs in the US had been scuppered by the trade row between Beijing and Washington, Chinese state news reported on September 19. - China OUT
 / AFP / STR
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Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma said his promise to create 1 million jobs in the US is impossible to fulfill because of the US-China trade war, a setback in one high-profile effort for deeper cooperation between the world’s two largest economies.

Mr Ma, China’s richest man, made the remarks in an interview in the state-owned Xinhua news service, saying the pledge made to President Donald Trump is no longer feasible because of the unstable trade situation. Mr Ma and Mr Trump met in January 2017 to discuss how adding small and medium-sized U.S. businesses to Alibaba’s platform would boost employment.

Mr Ma has grown increasingly critical of the trade battle between the US and China, warning that it will damage businesses around the world. On Tuesday, he cautioned China’s business and political leaders to prepare for the conflict to last 20 years, beyond the Trump presidency, as the two countries battle for economic supremacy.

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“The promise was made based on China and the U.S. having a collaborative and friendly relationship,” he said in the Xinhua interview. “The situation now has completely destroyed our premise, so it can no longer be completed.”

Mr Ma also said in the interview that he will keep making efforts to push for the healthy development of bilateral trade ties. He said that trade is not a weapon and shouldn’t be used for wars.

On Thursday, Mr Ma said weakness in the economic outlook is “problematic” for the company.

“The economic outlook is not perfect of course, and it will last longer than people expect,” Mr Ma said at the World Economic Forum in Tianjin. “If you look at the government conference papers, every year they say we have complex problems in the economy.”

Tensions have escalated this week as China vowed to retaliate against US plans to levy tariffs on about $200 billion (Dh734.5bn) in Chinese goods. China said it will impose retaliatory tariffs against $60bn of US goods, ranging from meat to wheat and textiles.

“Short term, business communities in China, U.S., Europe will all be in trouble,” Mr Ma said on Tuesday, during a speech at Alibaba’s investor day in Hangzhou. “This thing will last long. If you want a short-term solution, there is no solution.”