Millennium Post

No place for 'unilateral­ism' in trade disputes: Chinese PM

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BEIJING: Amid the escalating trade war with US, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday appealed for global support for free trade, saying "unilateral­ism" does not offer solutions to trade disputes which should be redressed through consultati­on.

Speaking at the summer session of the World Economic Forum in the eastern city of Tianjin, Li, the second ranking leader of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), also ruled out any attempts by Beijing to weaken the Chinese currency to boost its exports.

"It is essential that we uphold the basic principles of multilater­alism and free trade," Li said a day after China and the US swapped tit-for-tat tariffs.

While US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese products worth about USD 200 billion on Tuesday, on top of USD 50 billion already targeted, China said it would retaliate with tariff hike on USD 60 billion worth of US imports to be effective from next Monday.

After Beijing decided to retaliate Tuesday with duties on American products, Trump accused China of seeking to influence midterm congressio­nal elections by taking aim at his political base.

Without directly referring to the ongoing tariff war, Li said solutions "need to be worked out through consultati­ons."

"No unilateral­ism will offer a viable solution," he said.

He also said China has no intention of weakening its currency to help exporters and will not engage in any form of competitiv­e devaluatio­n of its exchange rate.

China will stick to market-oriented reform of the exchange rate formation mechanism and won't pursue competitiv­e devaluatio­n of its currency, he said.

"China will create condi- tions for a stable exchange rate," Li said, rebutting speculatio­n that the Chinese government deliberate­ly engineered the devolution of the currency in recent months.

The Yuan depreciate­d by about eight per cent against the US dollar since March which led to the speculatio­n that it was aimed offsetting the effects of US tariffs on Chinese imports.

Some people think China deliberate­ly [devalued the yuan]; this is groundless, Li said, in an indirect response to Trump's allegation­s that Beijing is manipulati­ng its currency, the Hong-kong based South China Morning Post reported.

"A one-way depreciati­on will do more harm than good for China," Li said.

"China will not choose the path of bolstering exports by devaluing the yuan the yuan exchange rate will be kept basically stable," he said.

Li also said China will adopt a stricter protection system on intellectu­al property rights (IPRS), a key demand by Trump to protect the rights of US technology investors in China.

Li said that protecting IPRS means protecting and stimulatin­g innovation. China cannot achieve innovative developmen­t without an environmen­t that respects knowledge and protects property rights, he said.

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