Bangkok Post

Xi soothes US-China trade war fears

President pledges greater openness

- RYAN MCMORROW LAURENT THOMET

BEIJING: Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged yesterday to lower car tariffs this year and take other steps to open the world’s second-biggest economy “wider and wider”, addressing major complaints by the United States in a simmering trade row.

Xi’s remarks follow weeks of tit-for-tat tariffs and mutual threats of more levies on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of products between Beijing and Washington that have raised fears of a trade war that could lacerate the global economy.

While he did not directly mention US President Donald Trump’s trade demands, Xi told an economic forum on the southern island of Hainan that Beijing “does not seek a trade surplus and hopes to increase imports.’’

Xi also used the speech to address global security and developmen­t, saying that “Cold War mentality and zero-sum games are becoming increasing­ly obsolete and outdated.”

“Promising a new phase of opening up,” he said China “will considerab­ly lower tariffs on cars and other products this year, take measures to liberalise automobile investment, and protect intellectu­al property — all areas that have been high on the list of demands by Washington.

“Economic globalisat­ion is an irreversib­le trend of the time,” Xi told the Boao Forum for Asia. “The door of China’s opening up will not close, it will only open wider and wider.”

But he gave few details nor an exact date for implementi­ng the measures, which were mostly recycled from previous pledges.

The car tariffs were the target of a Trump tweet on Monday, saying China charges much higher levies than the United States: “Does that sound like free or fair trade. No, it sounds like STUPID TRADE — going on for years!”

Xi’s speech buoyed world markets, with Asian stocks closing higher and European shares up at the opening after being hammered by the trade row in recent weeks.

“Asian markets are happy, US and European markets are likely to be happy too,” said Christophe­r Balding, a Peking University economics professor. “The tone was conciliato­ry but Washington is bargaining for action, not promises.”

Christine Lagarde, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, congratula­ted the Chinese leader on his commitment to openness.

The measures he laid out such as “removing caps, reducing barriers” were “very specific,” she told the Boao Forum.

Beijing’s restrictio­ns on foreign ownership in the auto sector have forced foreign companies to partner with Chinese firms and share their technology.

Elon Musk, CEO of electric car giant Tesla Inc asked for Trump’s help on the issue this year, alluding to the troubles his firm has faced producing in China.

Xi said those restrictio­ns would be liberalise­d, pledging “to quickly relax restrictio­ns on foreign shareholdi­ng, especially the restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the automobile industry”.

The threatened tariff war was spurred by a US Trade Representa­tive investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices, which alleged wide-scale theft and forced technology transfers.

Xi pledged specific measures to address concerns on IP protection.

“This year, we will reorganise the State Intellectu­al Property Office to strengthen law enforcemen­t,” he told the forum.

Pledges on autos and IP were accompanie­d by a promise to push through reforms in the financial services industry, which would open up to more foreign participat­ion — reforms first announced last year.

But Chinese officials have promised many of the measures in the past with little action — Washington says it has grown tired of China’s unfulfille­d pledges.

“This could provide Trump with an opportunit­y to back down from his tariff threats while claiming a victory of sorts,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, analyst at Capital Economics.

“In practice, however, there was little in Xi’s speech that we haven’t heard before and nothing that would address broader US concerns over China’s trade practices.”

 ??  ?? China’s President Xi Jinping delivers a speech during the opening of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2018 in Hainan yesterday.
China’s President Xi Jinping delivers a speech during the opening of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2018 in Hainan yesterday.

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