Global Times

US bias against Chinese companies weird, doomed

- SOURCE

Over the past 24 hours, two things have happened that have highlighte­d the completely different attitudes of the US and Chinese government­s toward bilateral economic and trade cooperatio­n.

During a virtual dialogue with US business leaders on Tuesday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said that China welcomes American companies and will further open up Chinese market, and the country will continue to work toward a market- based and law- governed business environmen­t.

On the same day, however, news came that the US Commerce Department issued a subpoena to an unnamed Chinese company, a move media reports described as part of the government’s risk assessment of its supply chain. As Washington is reportedly reviewing supply chains for key industries in an attempt to establish a supply chain that excludes China, messages emanating from the US all point to the Biden administra­tion continuing the Trump administra­tion’s hardline stance on Chinese technology companies.

These two episodes tell two very different stories about the expectatio­ns of each government toward China- US economic and trade cooperatio­n.

On the one hand, even amid the escalating political frictions between China and the US, the Chinese government is still making earnest efforts to send a signal that its willingnes­s to promote bilateral economic and trade cooperatio­n has not changed.

On the other hand, Washington’s increasing­ly ideologica­l aggression has become the biggest obstacle to bilateral economic cooperatio­n.

Washington may believe that containing China’s developmen­t by cutting Chinese technology companies off US supplies of key components would restore its competitiv­eness and consolidat­e its absolute technologi­cal dominance in the world, but they are actually threatenin­g to destroy the overall environmen­t for bilateral trade and business exchanges.

VOICE

Business communitie­s from both countries had hope that the Biden administra­tion, once coming to power, could make a difference from the previous Trump administra­tion in terms of China- related trade policy, changing course to restore market confidence. But to their disappoint­ment, increasing signs suggest that the Biden administra­tion hasn’t walked from the policy approach of suppressin­g and containing China. This is a big blow to the businesses at both ends.

The world has taken notice that the White House has, repeatedly, said that the US does not seek confrontat­ion with China. When answering a press question on how to address US- China tensions, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said on Tuesday that the US is engaged with China at a range of levels, and sees its relationsh­ip with China as one not of conflict, but of competitio­n.

But when it comes to practical action, the White House has yet to relax its crackdown on China and Chinese technology companies. In the economic sphere alone, nearly all of Washington’s recent maneuvers against Chinese businesses, such as the recent subpoena to the Chinese company, does not bode well for business confidence at all.

We have to be very frank that continued confrontat­ion between the world’s two largest economies won’t do any good to either country. China’s market is kept wide open and remaining growing fast, which will always open its arms for global companies, of all countries and regions, to invest and do business and make money. The US government effort to discrimina­te and crack down on selected businesses is weird and doomed.

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