China Daily (Hong Kong)

Singapore leader: US should look at self on trade deficit

Lee stresses need for multilater­al framework

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@ chinadaily­usa.com

The reason the United States is running an overall trade deficit is not mainly because of other nations’ restrictio­ns, Singaporea­n Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Monday.

“If you are spending more than you are producing, that means you will have a trade deficit; if you’re spending less than you’re producing, that means you will save money or run a trade surplus,” Lee said in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.

US President Donald Trump, who is visiting Lee’s country to attend a historic summit with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s top leader Kim Jong-un on Tuesday, campaigned on a promise to bring down the US trade deficit, which he said last week stood at $817 billion.

The Trump administra­tion has focused its criticism on many US trade partners, including China and the US’ key allies.

Most recently, it has renewed a threat to hike tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese goods and slapped a 25 percent tariff on steel imports and 10 percent tariff on aluminum imports from the European Union, Canada and Mexico.

“Fair trade is now to be called Fool Trade if it is not Reciprocal,” Trump tweeted on Monday after abruptfram­ework, ly withdrawin­g support for a joint declaratio­n on free trade signed at the G7 summit over the weekend in Canada.

In the interview with CNN, the Singaporea­n leader countered Trump’s arguments about the US trade deficit with China. He said Trump’s starting point is that he has a big trade deficit with China and he wants to fix the issue by having China buy more from the US.

“You have to look at it a more fundamenta­l level. Why is America running an overall imbalance? It’s not just — and it’s not mainly — because of trade restrictio­ns,” Lee said.

Internatio­nal rules

Lee said China’s economy has grown exponentia­lly compared with 2001 when it joined the World Trade Organizati­on. When it comes to trade issues, it is much better to talk in a multilater­al framework, “as there’s the WTO, there is a basis for many countries to come together to work in accordance with internatio­nal rules”.

The rules give space for all countries, big and small, to operate under the same he said.

On Sunday, during the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on Summit in Qingdao, Shandong province, Chinese President Xi Jinping extolled free trade and called for more openness.

“We should reject selfish, shortsight­ed, narrow and closed-off policies,” Xi said. “We must maintain the rules of the WTO, support the multilater­al trade system and build an open global economy.”

On Monday, leaders of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the WTO and other agencies gave their support to multilater­al trade and warned that US protection­ism could cause global economic damage.

At a meeting in Berlin hosted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, she and top officials from the IMF, the WTO and other agencies said in a joint statement that the “increasing protection­ist tendencies provide us with a clear incentive and opportunit­y to express our strong support for the multilater­al trading system”.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde said at the meeting that the global economy was in good shape. She said “the sun is still shining” but warned that it’s “getting darker by the day”.

“The biggest and darkest cloud that we see is the deteriorat­ion in confidence that is prompted by (an) attempt to challenge the way in which trade has been conducted, in which relationsh­ips have been handled and in which multilater­al organizati­ons have been operating,” Lagarde said.

AP contribute­d to this story.

 ??  ?? Lee Hsien Loong, Singaporea­n prime minister
Lee Hsien Loong, Singaporea­n prime minister

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