China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beijing, Washington set for trade talks

Negotiatio­ns will help relax tensions, reassure global economy, experts say

- By ZHONG NAN, JING SHUIYU and ZHOU JIN

Vice-Premier Liu He will head to Washington for the seventh round of high-level economic and trade talks from Thursday to Friday at the invitation of the United States, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Tuesday.

Economists said the upcoming round of talks is the latest attempt to relax trade tensions ahead of a March 1 tariff truce deadline despite “remaining difference­s”, and closer contacts to advance common ground are not only a positive sign to companies from both countries, but meaningful in terms of global economic growth.

Liu, who is President Xi Jinping’s special envoy and chief of the Chinese delegation in the China-US comprehens­ive economic dialogue, will meet US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Tuesday that it is the right choice for China and the US to respect each other and enhance cooperatio­n, which is also the common expectatio­n of the internatio­nal community.

Wang made the remark when meeting in Beijing with a delegation led by Myron Brilliant, executive vice-president and head of internatio­nal affairs at the US Chamber of Commerce.

Liang Ming, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said, “Even though China and the US have reached more consensuse­s and narrowed difference­s during recent consultati­ons, certain issues still remain.”

China and the US had in-depth communicat­ion on topics of mutual concern, including technology transfers, intellectu­al property rights protection, nontariff barriers, the service sector, agricultur­e, the trade balance and an implementa­tion mechanism in Beijing last week.

The two sides said they will step up their work within the time limit for consultati­ons set by both heads of state, and strive for consensus.

“It does not seem realistic that all trade disputes between the world’s two largest economies can be resolved merely through several negotiatio­ns,” he said, adding that the two nations still have difference­s on some structural issues.

Liang urged both sides to better align their interests and promote the healthy developmen­t of Sino-US economic and trade relations through consultati­ons.

Despite remaining difference­s, the fact that China and the US are in closer contact to advance trade talks is an encouragin­g sign, said Zhu Min, chair of the National Institute of Financial Research at Tsinghua University.

Affected by the rise of trade protection­ism and weak market demand, global foreign direct investment fell by nearly a fifth in 2018 to an estimated $1.2 trillion from $1.47 trillion in 2017, according to the latest Global Investment Trends Monitor report by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, released in late January.

With regard to some disagreeme­nts on structural issues, such as intellectu­al property protection­s and nontariff barriers, they can be gradually resolved as China continues to deepen reform and pursue highqualit­y developmen­t, rather than as a result of the country’s momentary response to external pressure, Lee Minsoo, head of the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s economics unit in China, told China Central Television.

A long-term perspectiv­e is needed to evaluate how trade tensions can eventually affect China as well as how the country can see the challenge as an opportunit­y, because in the long run, trade tensions can further drive China’s opening-up and supply-side structural reform, Lee said.

Chinese stocks have seen steady rises in recent trading days, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gaining 6 percent since the start of last week, widely believed to have been buoyed, in part, by hopes that Sino-US trade talks were making progress.

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