Stabroek News

China urges ‘calm and rational’ resolution to U.S.-Sino trade war

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BEIJING, (Reuters) - China hopes Beijing and Washington will resolve their trade dispute “with a calm and rational attitude”, Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said yesterday, ahead of talks in two weeks between the two sides.

The United States and China have been locked in an escalating trade war for over a year. They have levied punitive duties on hundreds of billions of dollars of each other’s goods, roiling financial markets and threatenin­g global growth.

A new round of high-level talks between the world’s two largest economies is expected in Washington on Oct. 10-11, led from the Chinese side by President Xi Jinping’s top economic adviser, Vice Premier Liu He.

Wang, who has been part of China’s negotiatin­g team with the United States, told a news conference that Liu would go to Washington for the talks the week after China’s National Day holiday, which ends on Oct. 7.

He said he hoped both sides would find ways to resolve their difference­s. “We believe this will benefit both countries’ people and the world,” he added.

The Trump administra­tion is considerin­g radical new financial pressure tactics on Beijing, including the possibilit­y of delisting Chinese companies from U.S. stock exchanges.

Sources told Reuters on Friday that the move would be part of a broader effort to limit U.S. investment­s into Chinese companies, in part because of growing security concerns about their activities.

China has hit back at U.S. criticisms about lack of market access for U.S. firms, forced technology transfers and poor protection of intellectu­al property.

Wang reiterated that China will open up more sectors of the economy to foreign investors, and its policy of protecting foreign companies’ rights in the country will not change.

Earlier, Commerce Minister Zhong Shan told the news conference in Beijing that Chinese companies faced many difficulti­es due to the trade frictions which he said posed unpreceden­ted trade challenges to the country.

China would expand imports, and measures to stabilise trade would yield positive results, he said without giving details.

The trade war has added to tensions between China and the United States, whose ties are also strained over U.S. criticism of human rights issues in China, including protests in Hong Kong, the disputed South China Sea and U.S. support for Chinese-claimed Taiwan.

 ??  ?? Wang Shouwen
Wang Shouwen

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