Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US business group worried Trump unprepared for commercial talks with China

A U.S. business group voice concern over the lack of preparatio­ns for President Trump’s visit to Beijing next week to discuss the trade imbalance with strong emphasis on strong need for structural changes

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A TOP U.S. business lobby in China said yesterday it was concerned U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion was not making sufficient preparatio­n for talks on imbalances in the bilateral economic relationsh­ip ahead of his November visit.

Little advance work has been done for the visit, said William Zarit, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. He was referring to meetings by working level officials to negotiate outcomes on commercial issues for Trump’s meeting with his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping. “From what I understand, there really hasn’t been much of that for this visit, which makes us a bit concerned that there may not be much discussion on the structural issues,” Zarit told reporters in Beijing.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross will bring a business delegation to Beijing during Trump’s visit. Some in the U.S. business community are worried that deals announced on the trip could distract from solutions to longstandi­ng complaints over discrimina­tory Chinese policies and market access restrictio­ns.

Zarit said he hoped proposed deals from the business delegation “do not overshadow the real need for structural changes in the economic relationsh­ip”. Trump, who will stop in five Asian countries on his first visit to the region as president, will arrive in Beijing on Nov. 8.

U.S. officials were “still waiting” for a Chinese response to issues raised during the U.S.-China Comprehens­ive Economic Dialogue in July, Zarit said, though he did not give specifics.

He called Chinese officials “master negotiator­s” and said the U.S. government and business community had long suffered from a less strategic view of the economic relationsh­ip.

Ross, has said the United States will be looking for “immediate results” and “tangible agreements” during Trump’s visit, but has acknowledg­ed that market access, intellectu­al property rights, and tariffs are more complex and will take a longer time to negotiate.

Washington and Beijing launched a 100-day economic plan during Trump’s first meeting with Xi in April, including some industry-specific announceme­nts, such as the resumption of American beef sales in China. But U.S. business groups have expressed disappoint­ment over the extent of the outcomes.

Xi vowed on Monday that China would take more measures to open up the economy. He made the remarks at a meeting with members of an advisory board to Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management, including Apple Inc chief executive Tim Cook and Facebook Inc’s Mark Zuckerberg.

China will make joint efforts with the United States to “take each other’s interests and concerns into considerat­ion, resolve disputes and contradict­ions, and engage in win-win cooperatio­n”, Xi said according to the official China Daily newspaper.

U.S. business lobbies argue that their members are restricted in those industries while Chinese companies operate freely in the U.S. market. They have also criticized Beijing’s “Made in China 2025” plan, which offers government backing for sectors the Chinese government deems strategic. Particular­ly galling to foreign tech firms are a slate of new national security and cyber security regulation­s that mandate companies store crucial data within China and pass security reviews they argue could put business secrets at risk.

 ??  ?? President Trump (L) and Chinese President Xi are scheduled to meet for the third time in Chinese capital on Nov. 8 to discuss economic ties.
President Trump (L) and Chinese President Xi are scheduled to meet for the third time in Chinese capital on Nov. 8 to discuss economic ties.

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