Global Times

Economic dialogue kicks off

One- year China- US cooperatio­n plan expected

- By Liu Xin

The well- developed trade exchanges between China and the US benefit both sides, experts said, as the first round of bilateral economic talks kicked off on Wednesday with the expectatio­n that an extension from a 100- day to a one- year cooperatio­n plan will help smooth frictions.

“Cooperatio­n is the only right choice for our two countries. The giant ship of ChinaUS economic and trade relations is sailing on the right course,” Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang said Tuesday in a keynote speech at a business luncheon in Washington, DC.

Experts predicted that sensitive issues between the two sides would be dealt with during a longer cooperatio­n process, and the well- developed Sino- US trade ties could help dispel the negative influence of protection­ism.

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce said they expect the China and the US to discuss a one- year cooperatio­n plan during the Comprehens­ive Economic

Dialogue ( CED).

Wang co- chaired the first round of the CED on Wednesday in Washington, DC with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

The business communitie­s in both countries had been reassured by the joint decision to establish the four high- level dialogue mechanisms, including the CED, and the 100- day Plan for China- US economic cooperatio­n, Wang said.

“Launching the China- US 100- day action plan enhanced mutual trust, and it helped create a harmonious atmosphere for the Wednesday talks. It means they can touch on more sensitive issues with a full understand­ing of each other’s concerns,” said Liu Zhiqin, a senior fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at the Renmin University of China.

The 100- day action plan was initiated after Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump met at Mar- a- Largo in Florida in April, signing agreements on agricultur­e products, energy and banking and financial services.

As more details of the one- year plan are revealed, there will be a new timetable and a new plan for the two sides to deal with problems on the trade deficit, Liu said.

The US is calling for broader market access to China, and China has urged the US to lift high- tech export barriers.

“US investors want China to open its capital markets, and hope to enter China’s banking, financial and insurance industries, and China has made efforts in response to their requests. But it can’t be done immediatel­y as a sudden influx of foreign capital would affect the stability of China’s current market system,” Liu said.

Although the trade deficit is the key concern of the US side, “it should be noted that much of China’s trade surplus with the US are exports with less added value or made by US enterprise­s in China. And the US has adopted a different statistica­l approach from China on the trade deficit with China,” said Bai Ming, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

Chinese experts have called on the US to approve exports of high- tech products to China and for China to further open up its services sector, especially the financial and tourism industries, to cut the deficit.

“However, the US, which still adopts a Cold War mentality, uses national security as an excuse and is reluctant to lift barriers on high- tech exports to China. The US also fears losing its leading position in the hightech field if China acquires technologi­es from its products,” Bai told the Global Times.

American businesses have not had their fair share of the “cake” due to outdated US regulation­s on export controls. In 2001, US high- tech exports to China accounted for 16.7 percent of China’s total imports of such products, while last year the percentage dropped to 8.2 percent, Wang said.

A bigger cake

Despite the frictions, experts reached by the Global Times were optimistic over future trade with the US.

“It’s understand­able that some government­s will take more measures to protect their own enterprise­s, but it should not break the trade balance with other nations. Trump, who focuses more on commercial interests, may learn this from his experience over the past months in dealing with Chinese issues,” Liu said.

Wang also touched on protection­ism in his keynote speech, saying that “We understand that quite a few Americans support ‘ Buy American, Hire American,’ just as in China there is also a voice for ‘ Buy Chinese, Hire Chinese.’ But it is important that both sides come to realize with cool heads that given the depth of our business cooperatio­n, neither Chinese nor Americans can do without goods from the other country.”

“The well- developed trade exchanges between China and the US will also help dispel the negative influence of protection­ism to some extent. Although trade friction is inevitable in the future as competitio­n between China and the US may increase, the two sides will make efforts to make a bigger cake and exchange ideas on disputes,” Bai said.

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