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Economy

How Jack Ma Is Selling Jobs to Trump

U.S. entrepreneurs will be able to reach China’s enormous middle class.

Donald Trump, Jack Ma

Billionaire entrepreneur and Alibaba founder Jack Ma met with President-elect Donald Trump in New York Monday to discuss adding 1 million jobs in the U.S. by giving American entrepreneurs the know-how necessary to sell into China.

The lynchpin behind Ma’s plan is of course Alibaba. The $230 billion Chinese e-commerce platform could be used to help entrepreneurs and farmers in the U.S. sell to China’s middle class, which consists of more than 450 million people, the company said in a tweet:

https://twitter.com/AlibabaGroup/status/818516305926062085

The meeting is somewhat ironic given the president-elect’s criticism of China, which he has accused of being a currency manipulator and job stealer, and which he has threatened with massive trade tariffs.

Alibaba went public in the U.S. in 2014, raising $25 billion in what was then the largest IPO in history. One of its biggest shareholders is Japanese telecom giant Softbank, a company that Trump applauded in December for its decision to invest $50 billion and 50,000 jobs in the U.S.

Ma is credited with founding Alibaba in his Hangzhou apartment in 1999. The company reported $15.6 billion in total sales for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2016.

Following their meeting at Trump Tower on Monday, Trump told reporters Ma is a “great, great entrepreneur” with whom he is “going to do some great things.”

Shares of Alibaba were up about 1% in afternoon trading.