Business World

China signals it would cooperate with Trump gov’t

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BEIJING — Confronted by the challenge of a Donald Trumpled White House, China is signaling it’s ready to work with the new administra­tion and has already taken a handful of policy steps that may help fend off criticism over access to its markets.

The official Xinhua News Agency congratula­ted Mr. Trump on his inaugurati­on and said it hoped for “win-win” cooperatio­n between the two nations. An editorial run by state-backed newspaper China Daily took a similar tone, saying the world’s two largest economies should work together toward “an updated, more desirable version of globalizat­ion.”

That follows tangible measures last week, such as a plan to relax restrictio­ns on foreign investment in long- closed areas of the economy including banking, securities, futures, mutual funds and insurance. A senior official last week said China is prepared to enhance cooperatio­n with other countries to protect intellectu­al property rights, a bug-bear of US and European firms who have complained their technologi­es are copied and brands faked.

Ning Jizhe, China’s statistics chief and deputy head of the top economic planning body, used his Friday briefing on 2016 economic data to congratula­te Mr. Trump and say he hoped the new president keeps moving SinoAmeric­an cooperatio­n forward. The Ministry of Commerce last week said it’s willing to work with the new US administra­tion to help promote healthy trade developmen­t and economic ties, echoing President Xi Jinping’s speech to the World Economic

Forum in Davos that warned against trade wars and protection­ism.

Mr. Xi’s aim wasn’t to publicly debate Mr. Trump but to talk about how to solve common global problems, Zhang Jun, an economic affairs official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said Monday at a briefing in Beijing. China and the rest of the world are concerned Mr. Trump will pursue protection­ism, as are many of the Americans protesting his policies, Mr. Zhang said.

But it’s not all olive branch. Xinhua’s article congratula­ting Mr. Trump also laid out the areas China regards as off limits: “China’s resolve to safeguard its defining core interests in Taiwan and the South China Sea islands has always been strong,” it said.

Mr. Xi has a strong domestic imperative not to appear weak before a twice- a- decade Communist Party congress late this year, when several top leaders are due to be replaced. Policy makers also have pledged more focus on ensuring financial stability.

Mr. Trump opened his presidency with an “America first” appeal, saying the US will “bring back our jobs. We will bring back our borders. We will bring back our wealth.”

“For many decades, we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry; subsidized the armies of other countries, while allowing for the very sad depletion of our military,” he said.

He didn’t mention China by name in his inaugural address, in contrast to his campaign rhetoric in which he accused it of raping America and cheating on trade.

Mr. Trump has already walked back from some criticisms and so far hasn’t followed up on his pledge to label China a currency manipulato­r on his first day in office. His pick for Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin, agreed during a Senate confirmati­on hearing that China has shifted recently from efforts to weaken the yuan. He did say, however, he is willing to apply the manipulato­r label if warranted.

China doesn’t want a trade war with the US, said Chen Wenling, chief economist at the Beijingbas­ed China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, a think tank led by retired senior officials. But China isn’t afraid of a trade war and will not give in or compromise should the US wage one, she added.

“A trade war is a lose-lose for both sides, but the US will be harder hit,” she said.

China will take a positive approach to its relationsh­ip with the US, said Paul Haenle, a China adviser to President George W. Bush who’s now director of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy in Beijing. “The question is, can they do that quickly enough and effectivel­y enough to avoid the negative dynamics of a looming trade war?” — Bloomberg

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