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Japan, China to boost financial ties amid protection­ist, N. Korea tensions

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YOKOHAMA: Japan and China agreed to bolster economic and financial cooperatio­n, Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso said on Saturday, as US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist stance and tension over North Korea weigh on Asia’s growth outlook.

Chinese Finance Minister Xiao Jie, who missed a trilateral meeting with his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts on Friday for an emergency domestic meeting, had flown in for the talks with Aso, seeking to dispel speculatio­n his absence had any diplomatic implicatio­ns.

“We actively exchanged views on economic and financial situations in Japan and China and our cooperatio­n in the financial field,” Aso told reporters after the meeting, which included senior Finance Ministry and central bank officials.

“It was significan­t that we reconfirme­d the need for financial cooperatio­n between the two countries while sharing our experience­s in dealing with economic policies and structural issues,” he added.

The two countries agreed to launch joint research on issues of mutual interest — without elaboratin­g — and to report the outcomes at the next talks, which will be held in 2018 in China.

They did not discuss issues such as currencies and geopolitic­al risks from North Korea’s nuclear and missile program during the dialogue, held on the sidelines of the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s (ADB) annual meeting in Yokohama, eastern Japan, Aso said.

Relations between Japan and China have been strained over territoria­l rows and Japan’s occupation of parts of China in WWII, though leaders have recently sought to mend ties through dialogue.

Still, China’s increasing presence in infrastruc­ture finance has alarmed some Japanese policymake­rs, who worry that Beijing’s new developmen­t bank, the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB), may overshadow the Japan-backed ADB.

Shortly before the bilateral talks on Saturday, Xiao voiced hope that the ADB will boost ties with China’s high-profile “One Belt One Road” (OBOR) infrastruc­ture developmen­t initiative­s.

“China hopes the ADB ... strengthen­s the strategic ties between its programs and the One Belt One Road initiative to maximize synergy effects and promote Asia’s further developmen­t,” Xiao told the ADB’s annual gathering.

Japan and China do agree on the need to respect free trade, which they see as crucial to Asia’s trade-dependent economies.

Finance officials from Japan, China and South Korea agreed to resist all forms of protection­ism in Friday’s trilateral meeting, taking a stronger stand than G-20 major economies against the protection­ist policies advocated by Trump.

 ??  ?? Chinese Finance Minister Xiao Jie, right, shakes hands with his Japanese counterpar­t Taro Aso during their bilateral meeting in Yokohama, Japan on Saturday. (Reuters)
Chinese Finance Minister Xiao Jie, right, shakes hands with his Japanese counterpar­t Taro Aso during their bilateral meeting in Yokohama, Japan on Saturday. (Reuters)

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