The Oklahoman

Xi: China will avoid decoupling amid tension with United States, Europe

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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — China's President Xi Jinping on Thursday spurned suggestion­s that his country might decouple or separate itself from the U.S. and other trading partners amid tension with Washington and Europe over technology and security.

Speaking by video link from Beijing to a meeting of Asia-Pacific CEOs, Xi promised to open China's market wider but announced no initiative­s to respond to complaints the ruling Communist Party improperly subsidizes and shields technology and other industries from foreign competitor­s.

Xi rejected suggestion­s Beijing might respond to U.S. sanctions on its fledgling technology companies by trying to separate their industries from global trading partners.

The ruling Communist Party has promoted its own standards for mobile phones and other technology, which would encourage customers that adopt them to use Chinese suppliers. That has prompted fears world markets might split into smaller segments with incompatib­le industry standards, hurting productivi­ty.

“We will never go back in history by seeking to decouple or forming a `small circle' to keep others out,” Xi said.

Thursday's event came ahead of a meeting of AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n leaders hosted by Malaysia. The meeting Friday is due to be conducted via video conference due to the pandemic.

Xi's comments followed Sunday's signing of the world's largest free trade agreement, the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, by Beijing and 14 other Asian neighbors.

The Chinese-initiated RCEP appeals to other developing countries because it reduces barriers to trade in farm goods, manufactur­ed goods and components, which make up most of their exports. It says little about trade in services and access for companies to operate in each other's economies, which the United States and other developed countries want.

The Trump administra­tion has cut off Chinese tech giant Huawei's access to most U.S. components and technology on security grounds. Washington has shut Huawei and a rival Chinese telecom equipment vendor, ZTE, out of the U.S. market. The White House is pressing the Chinese owner of video service TikTok to sell its U.S. operation, which American officials say is a security risk.

Xi promised to cut tariffs but gave no details.

“We will further reduce tariffs and institutio­nal costs, cultivate a number of import trade promotion innovation demonstrat­ion zones, and expand imports of high-quality products and services from various countries,” he said.

China's repeated promises to set up trade zones and ease import restrictio­ns prompt complaints by the United States, Europe, Japan and other trading partners that Beijing is using such isolated steps to avoid complying with promises made when it joined the World Trade Organizati­on in 2001 to allow foreign companies to compete freely in its economy.

China is one of the world's biggest importers, but the United States and other government­s complain Beijing is dragging its feet on carrying out two-decade-old promises to open its markets to foreign competitor­s in banking, finance and other services.

Leaders from Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia also spoke at Thursday's event, calling for a deeper commitment to open and free trade to bolster the region's economy.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said RCEP was a “big step forward” for Asian economic integratio­n as progress in APEC was hampered by Washington's inward-looking trade policy.

With new President-elect Joe Biden's government seen as more supportive of multilater­al trade, Lee voiced hope the new U.S. government will be more constructi­ve in its dealings with other countries.

“Taking care of America's interests does not mean having to ride roughshod over other countries' interests,” Lee said.

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