China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Trade tension risks under control

Senior officials also dismiss allegation­s of IPR abuses

- By JING SHUIYU and OUYANG SHIJIA Contact the writers at jingshuiyu@ chindaily.com.cn

The United States has benefited greatly from Sino-US trade despite its trade deficit with China, and accusation­s regarding China’s alleged intellectu­al property theft and forced technology transfers are unfounded, senior Chinese officials said on Tuesday.

The officials, from five central department­s, also said that the bilateral trade conflict is set to have an impact on the Chinese economy, but risks are generally under control.

They made the comments in Beijing during a news conference introducin­g a white paper titled The Facts and China’s Position on China-US Trade Friction, published on Monday.

At the news conference, Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce, said the US has made way more gains than China from bilateral trade.

Nearly 60 percent of China’s nominal trade surplus with the US comes from US enterprise­s operating in China, while China recorded a service trade deficit of $54.1 billion with the US last year, according to the white paper.

If those factors are taken into account, the US has actually gained more than China from Sino-US trade, the white paper said, citing research by Deutsche Bank.

“China runs a surplus in trade with the US, while the US enjoys a surplus of benefits,” Fu said.

Erin Ennis, senior vicepresid­ent of the US-China Business Council, said: “Issues in the bilateral relationsh­ip are difficult ones, but they are solvable. Solutions will require detailed negotiatio­ns to address the problems — but it will be worth the time and effort for both economies, and for both US and Chinese companies.”

China’s protection of intellectu­al property rights has been effective, said He Hua, deputy director of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion, adding that the US allegation­s of ineffectiv­e IPR protection are groundless.

China ranked 17th in terms of “most innovative economies” in the annual Global Innovation Index released in July by the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on and Cornell University in the US, the deputy director said.

In 2017, China moved up to second place in terms of internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns, with around 51,000 applicatio­ns submitted, according to He.

He also said a survey conducted by an independen­t domestic organizati­on last year showed that the score measuring the level of satisfacti­on among wholly foreign-owned companies regarding China’s protection and enforcemen­t of IPR was

China runs a surplus in trade with the US, while the US enjoys a surplus of benefits.” Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce

76.94, higher than that for all types of enterprise­s.

The ratio of foreign enterprise­s winning IPR lawsuits in China is more than 80 percent, making the country a favorite venue for multinatio­nals to launch IPR suits, he said, citing an article published on the US-based Diplomat website.

“Our progress in IPR protection is widely acknowledg­ed,” he said.

Vice-Minister of Commerce Wang Shouwen said technology transfers between companies is voluntary and based on unforced business agreements.

“No Chinese laws or policies force transfer of technolthe ogy by foreign enterprise­s,” he said.

Wang said technology transfers are the result of normal business negotiatio­ns between foreign and Chinese enterprise­s.

“Foreign enterprise­s want a good price (through technology transfers) in forming joint-venture enterprise­s with their Chinese partners. It’s voluntary.”

Officials admitted that the ongoing trade disputes will have an impact on the economy.

But Lian Weiliang, viceminist­er of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said, “China is fully capable of hedging the impact by expanding domestic demand and promoting high-quality developmen­t.”

Wang Yi, state councilor and foreign minister, said on Tuesday while meeting with leaders of the National Committee on US-China Relations and the US-China Business Council in New York that China is committed to further opening its economy and resolving bilateral difference­s through consultati­ons among equals.

He said some irresponsi­ble forces in the US have made unfounded accusation­s against China to undermine Sino-US trade and economic relations, which is harmful since the two countries have both benefited greatly from such relations.

 ??  ?? Lian Weiliang, vice-minister of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission
Lian Weiliang, vice-minister of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission
 ??  ?? He Hua, deputy director of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion
He Hua, deputy director of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion
 ??  ?? Luo Wen, vice-minister of Industry and Informatio­n
Luo Wen, vice-minister of Industry and Informatio­n
 ??  ?? Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce
Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce
 ??  ?? Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce
Fu Ziying, internatio­nal trade representa­tive and vice-minister of commerce
 ?? PHOTOS BY LI JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Zou Jiayi, vice-minister of finance
PHOTOS BY LI JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY Zou Jiayi, vice-minister of finance
 ??  ?? Guo Weimin, vice-minister of the State Council Informatio­n Office
Guo Weimin, vice-minister of the State Council Informatio­n Office

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