China–United States relations
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Chinese-U.S. relations (or Sino-American relations) refer to international relations between the United States and the People's Republic of China. China and the United States, where each nation regards each other as a potential adversary as well as a strategic partner, has been described by world leaders and academicians as the world's most important bilateral relationship of the century.
As of 2014, the United States has the world's largest economy and China the second largest. The International Monetary Fund has predicted that China's economy will overtake that of United States in GDP (PPP) sometime in 2014 but the United States' economy will remain larger than China's in nominal GDP.
China remains the largest foreign creditor to the United States.
See also
- General
- Air route authority between the United States and China
- Chimerica
- China as an emerging superpower
- China containment policy
- China Lobby
- Group of Two
- Strategic Economic Dialogue
- U.S.–China Strategic and Economic Dialogue
- Chinese Intelligence Operations in the United States
- Quadrilateral Security Dialogue
- History
- 1996 United States campaign finance controversy
- Cox Report
- Hainan Island incident
- Hu Na Incident
- Nixon in China
- Permanent normal trade relations
- Ping Pong Diplomacy
- Red Chinese Battle Plan
- U.S. immigration policy toward the People's Republic of China
- United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission