The Morning Call

Yellen eyes new policy in China to aid US jobs

- By Fatima Hussein and Ken Moritsugu

BEIJING — The Biden administra­tion will push China to change an industrial policy that poses a threat to U.S. jobs, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Monday after wrapping up four days of talks with Chinese officials.

She also said in Beijing they had “difficult conversati­ons” about national security, including American concerns that Chinese companies are supporting Russia in its war in Ukraine.

But the focus of her trip was industrial policy and what the U.S. and Europe describe as manufactur­ing overcapaci­ty in China. Wealthy nations fear a wave of low-priced Chinese exports that will overwhelm factories at home. Yellen cited the manufactur­ing of electric vehicles and their batteries as well as solar energy equipment — sectors that the U.S. administra­tion is trying to promote domestical­ly — as areas where Chinese government subsidies have driven rapid expansion of production.

“China is now simply too large for the rest of the world to absorb this enormous capacity. Actions taken by the PRC today can shift world prices,” she said, using the letters for China’s official name, the People’s Republic of China. “And when the global market is flooded by artificial­ly cheap Chinese products, the viability of American and other foreign firms is put into question.”

She said the U.S. would host Chinese counterpar­ts for their fourth economic and financial working-groups meetings next week “where these issues will be discussed at length.”

Last September, the U.S. and China formed working groups in an effort to ease tensions and deepen ties between the two nations.

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