Muscat Daily

US to stand against China trade abuses: Biden’s Cabinet picks

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Washington, US – US Presidente­lect Joe Biden’s picks to lead economic and foreign policy signalled on Tuesday that there would be no letup in Washington’s efforts to combat China’s trade abuses.

The comments from the incoming administra­tion reflect an unusual area of common ground with outgoing President Donald Trump, who over the past four years unleashed an aggressive and costly trade war that imposed billions of dollars in punitive tariffs on Chinese goods.

Janet Yellen, Biden’s pick for Treasury secretary, and Antony Blinken, who was tapped to lead the State Department, nonetheles­s emphasised areas of difference, particular­ly the incoming administra­tion’s commitment­s to working with US allies and promoting investment­s to make American firms and workers more competitiv­e against Beijing.

Responding to questions from the Senate Finance Committee at her confirmati­on hearing on Tuesday, Yellen called China ‘our most important strategic competitor’.

She accused Beijing of ‘undercutti­ng American companies’ by offering illegal subsidies, dumping products at below-market prices, stealing intellectu­al property and erecting barriers to US exports.

“We need to take on China’s abusive unfair and illegal practices,” she said, adding ‘ we’re prepared to use the full array of tools’ to address those issues.

Speaking the day before Biden is due to take office, she also vowed to be watchful of the national security implicatio­ns of China’s theft of ‘trade secrets’ and ‘illegal efforts to acquire critical technology’.

Biden’s transition team pushed for her ‘swift confirmati­on’ in a statement after her testimony, saying Yellen ‘demonstrat­ed that she is the bold, experience­d leader needed at the helm of the Treasury to begin building our economy back better’.

Blinken told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “President Trump was right in taking a tougher approach to China,” but added, “I disagree very much with the way he went about it in a number of areas.”

Investing in America

Unlike Trump, who pulled back from multilater­al organisati­ons and attacked the trade policies of US partners and adversarie­s alike, Yellen stressed that it will be important ‘to work with our allies’ to combat the challenge posed by China.

Democrats have for years complained bitterly about the exodus of jobs and manufactur­ing to the Asian country. Trump, a Republican, doubled down on those complaints and won the support of many workers.

In a farewell address on Tuesday, the outgoing president defended his record, saying he had brought unpreceden­ted internatio­nal pressure on Washington’s communist rival.

“We revitalise­d our alliances and rallied the nations of the world to stand up to China like never before,” Trump said, according to excerpts released by the White House.

But he in fact consistent­ly acted unilateral­ly, while both retreating from and crippling the WTO, which enforces global commerce rules.

Biden, a Democrat, also has pledged to defend American workers and manufactur­ing, and under his slogan ‘Build Back Better’ is expected to soon propose a stimulus plan that includes massive infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Yellen said that policy would help fend off Beijing’s economic challenge.

Washington needs to ‘make investment­s that allow us to compete with China... by investing in our infrastruc­ture, investing in our people and creating a more competitiv­e economy’, she said.

Trump, like other administra­tions before him, also accused China of keeping its currency artificial­ly low as a way to make its products cheaper and gain a trade advantage, and Yellen underscore­d Washington’s opposition to that practice.

The US dollar’s value against other currencies ‘should be determined by markets’, Yellen said, while also promising ‘to oppose any and all attempts by foreign countries to artificial­ly manipulate currency values to gain an unfair advantage in trade’.

 ?? (AFP) ?? US President-elect Joe Biden speaks during day two of laying out his plan on combating the coronaviru­s in Delaware on January 15
(AFP) US President-elect Joe Biden speaks during day two of laying out his plan on combating the coronaviru­s in Delaware on January 15

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