China Daily (Hong Kong)

Boeing, GM urge calm approach

US companies prefer negotiatio­ns, long-term policy to confrontat­ion

- By ZHONG NAN and ZHU WENQIAN Contact the writers at zhongnan@ chinadaily.com.cn

A number of large commercial entities from the United States including Boeing, General Motors and the American Soybean Associatio­n, have urged the US government to resolve the simmering trade dispute with China through constructi­ve dialogue, and to seek sustainabl­e trade policies.

Their response came after China announced plans to impose 25 percent supplement­al tariffs on 106 US products including automobile­s, commercial aircraft, chemicals and soybeans on Wednesday as a response to tariff proposals from the Trump Administra­tion.

Items on the latest list from Beijing include planes with an operating empty weight between 15,000 kilograms and 45,000 kg, which covers a series of Boeing 737 planes.

Some single-aisle Boeing aircraft, including the B737700, B737-800, B737-900 and B737 MAX 7, are among the major plane models that Boeing exported to China over the past few years, and are among the products likely to see higher tariffs.

As a possible trade war will affect businesses from both countries, Boeing said that while both government­s have “outlined positions that could do harm to the global aerospace industry, neither has yet imposed these drastic measures”, the group said in a statement.

“We will continue in our own efforts to proactivel­y engage both government­s and build on the recent assurances by US and Chinese leaders that productive talks are ongoing. A strong and vibrant aerospace industry is important to the economic prosperity and national security of both countries,” the US aircraft manufactur­er said.

From 2018 to 2020, Air China, China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines plan to purchase more than 300 aircraft from the B737 series, according to their earnings reports.

China is now the world’s largest aircraft market by sales volume. The country imported 60 billion yuan ($9.52 billion) of Boeing’s products and accounted for 26 percent of Boeing’s global production, said Lin Zhijie, an aviation industry analyst and columnist at Carnoc — China’s largest civil aviation web portal.

“There is no significan­t difference in performanc­e between Airbus SE’s aircraft and Boeing’s, and the product certainly can be replaced with a strong alternativ­e,” he said.

The homegrown C919 large passenger jet, and the A320 series made by European aircraft manufactur­er Airbus — the archrival of Boeing — are competing models of the narrow-body B737.

Meanwhile, Boeing is building a B737 MAX completion and delivery center in Zhoushan, Zhejiang province, and it is expected to go into operation in May. By the end of this year, Boeing plans to deliver the first B737 MAX plane directly from Zhoushan to a domestic airline.

General Motors also said in a statement released on Wednesday that the company supports a positive trade relationsh­ip between the US and China, and hopes they value a vibrant auto industry and understand the interdepen­dence between the world’s two largest automotive markets.

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