Global Times

Trump’s visit set to strengthen ties

China-US economic relations on positive track: experts

- By Chen Qingqing

The upcoming visit of US President Donald Trump will help yield positive results in Sino-US bilateral economic ties, experts forecast on Thursday.

In response to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s invitation, Trump is expected to pay a state visit to China this year, Geng Shuang, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said during a press conference on Wednesday.

During Trump’s visit, the two leaders will discuss long-term plans and the basis of China-US relations, He Weiwen, an executive council member at the China Society for the WTO, told the Global Times on Thursday. “Trump will bring up some urgent issues, such as the Korean Peninsula crisis. But in terms of the economy, the talks will center on trade, investment and global economic growth,” He said.

A key priority for Xi and Trump will be to further strengthen China-US strategic cooperatio­n and to come up with a plan to bring North Korea back to peaceful dialogue and reduce military tensions in the Korean Peninsula, Rajiv Biswas, chief economist for IHS Markit Asia-Pacific, told the Global Times on Thursday.

However, the US government should realize that playing the North Korea card to put pressure on China over trade issues would be useless, He Weiwen noted. “The US holds the key to solving the Korean Peninsula crisis, not China,” he said. He also suggested that the two sides should keep trade issues separate from geopolitic­al ones.

The US has long had a trade deficit with China, and rebalancin­g bilateral trade relations has been one focus of the Trump administra­tion.

The US’ exports to China recorded $115.6 billion in 2016 while it imported $462.6 billion worth of goods from China, according to the US Census Bureau, resulting in a trade deficit of $347 billion.

“China has never sought a trade surplus with the US. The current situation is completely market-driven,” Gao Feng, spokesman for the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, told a press briefing on Thursday.

From January to August, China imported $100.4 billion worth of goods from the US, up 20.1 percent year-onyear, Gao noted. The growth rate was much higher than that of the overall bilateral trade volume or China’s exports to the US.

The upcoming visit of Trump to China will be an important opportunit­y to strengthen bilateral economic cooperatio­n and improve understand­ing on a wide range of trade issues, Biswas noted.

Common ground

The meeting between Xi and Trump in the US in April set a good example for China-US dialogue, and the 100day trade plan could be further extended, Diao Daming, an assistant research fellow at the Institute of American Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Thursday. Under the plan, China has allowed more market access to the US in sectors such as finance, agricultur­e and energy.

“China may have a trade surplus with the US, but the US gains most of the benefits,” Diao said, noting that US companies operating in China have gained growing profits, and some of them have played an active role in promoting stable China-US relations.

Some trade frictions exist in sectors such as steel and rubber, but this will not change the fundamenta­ls of bilateral trade and investment, Diao said.

“The upcoming visit will also shed light on emerging sectors such as high tech, cyber security and intellectu­al property rights,” he remarked.

China’s rapid growth in technology has generated increasing benefits for domestic companies, which may become strong competitor­s for their US counterpar­ts. “This is what the US government is really afraid of,” Diao noted.

More open market

An important focus for the two leaders will be to strengthen their commitment to liberalize trade in more goods and services under bilateral trade agreements, noted Biswas.

“Key areas where the US may be able to gain more access to the fast-growing Chinese consumer market are in agricultur­al commoditie­s and processed foods, as well as in financial services,” he said.

“But the US should realize that it will be more and more difficult to grant foreign investors super-national treatment as China pursues economic reforms and sees rising labor costs,” he noted.

Still, experts forecast that talks on the Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) may not gain pace despite Trump’s visit. “The major obstacle to BIT negotiatio­ns comes from the US Congress,” Diao noted.

“China may have a trade surplus with the US, but the US gains most of the benefits.” Diao Daming Assistant research fellow at the Institute of American Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A US cargo ship at a port in Qingdao, East China’s Shandong Province
Photo: VCG A US cargo ship at a port in Qingdao, East China’s Shandong Province

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