Business World

US, China need ‘tough’ conversati­ons — Yellen

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BEIJING — US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Sunday that the ability to have difficult conversati­ons has put the two economic superpower­s on “a more stable footing” over the past year.

As they began a meeting in Beijing, Mr. Li responded that the two countries needed to respect each other and should be partners, not adversarie­s, adding that “constructi­ve progress” had been made during Ms. Yellen’s trip.

Ms. Yellen said Washington and Beijing had a “duty” to responsibl­y manage the complex relationsh­ip, as she brought her case for reining in China’s excess factory capacity to the Chinese leadership.

“While we have more to do, I believe that, over the past year, we have put our bilateral relationsh­ip on more stable footing,” Ms. Yellen said. “This has not meant ignoring our difference­s or avoiding tough conversati­ons. It has meant understand­ing that we can only make progress if we directly and openly communicat­e with one another.”

Ms. Yellen has made the threat of China’s excess production of electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels and other clean energy products to producers in the US and other countries a focus of her second visit to China in nine months.

She visited Beijing in July 2023 to try to normalize bilateral economic relations after a period of heightened tension caused by difference­s over issues ranging from Taiwan to COVID-19’s origins and trade disputes.

In a further sign of the ties stabilisin­g, US President Joseph R. Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to manage tensions over the South China Sea in a nearly two-hour call on Tuesday, their first direct talks since a summit in November.

US and Chinese military officials met their Chinese counterpar­ts last week for a series of rare meetings in Hawaii focussed on operationa­l safely and profession­alism.

BALANCED GROWTH

On Saturday in the southern export hub of Guangzhou, Ms. Yellen and her main economic counterpar­t, Vice Premier He Lifeng, agreed to launch a dialogue focussed on “balanced growth.” Ms. Yellen said she intends to use the forum to advocate for a level playing field with China to protect US workers and businesses.

“As the world’s two largest economies, we have a duty to our own countries and to the world to responsibl­y manage our complex relationsh­ip and to cooperate and show leadership on addressing pressing global challenges,” Ms. Yellen told Mr. Li.

The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit forecasts China’s battery manufactur­ing capacity will outpace demand by a factor of four by 2027, as its EV industry continues to grow.

Beijing’s support for batterypow­ered rides has helped homegrown champions like BYD 002594.SZ and Geely 0175.HK grab share in the world’s biggest car market, and turn China into the world’s largest auto exporter.

But rapid growth has also meant China has created excess manufactur­ing capacity that could be between 5 and 10 million EVs per year, according to consultanc­y Automobili­ty.

Still, far from curbing investment in manufactur­ing, China has doubled down on Mr. Xi’s new mantra of unleashing “new productive forces,” by investing in cutting-edge technology including EVs, commercial spacefligh­t and life sciences — areas where many US firms hold advantages.

Throughout her visit, Chinese state media have pushed back against Ms. Yellen’s message on excess capacity.

State news agency Xinhua said on Saturday that talking up “Chinese overcapaci­ty” in the clean energy sector created a pretext for protection­ist policies to shield American companies.

Suppressin­g China’s EV-related industries will not help the US grow its own, Xinhua said, expressing hope that more headway could be made during Ms. Yellen’s visit to break down barriers hindering mutually beneficial cooperatio­n.

 ?? ?? US TREASURY SECRETARY JANET YELLEN
US TREASURY SECRETARY JANET YELLEN

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