Daily Nation Newspaper

China promises to protect foreign intellectu­al property

….as Trump threatens $60bn in tariffs

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BEIJING -China made further promises to protect the intellectu­al property (IP) of foreigners investing in its economy, addressing a long-standing grievance as US President Donald Trump plans new tariffs aimed at Beijing.

Speaking on Tuesday at the end of the annual National People’s Congress, premier Li

Keqiang said China wants to avoid a trade war and that the government plans to further open the manufactur­ing sector — and that it won’t force foreign companies to transfer technology to domestic ones while doing so.

Li’s comments followed reports late Monday in Washington that the White House plans to impose tariffs worth as much as $60bn on Chinese products as one outcome of an investiga- tion by US trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, extracting recompense for theft of IP and investment policies that make technology transfer a pre-condi- tion for doing business in China.

The administra­tion is said to be considerin­g wide-ranging tariffs on everything from consumer electronic­s to shoes and clothing made in China, as well as restrictio­ns on Chinese investment­s in the US, according to people briefed on the matter.

That’s one of the administra­tion’s lines of attack to deal with the lopsided bilateral trade account; according to US data, the trade deficit with China reached a record $375bn last year, with China’s accounting considerab­ly lower.

"A large deficit is not something we want to see," Li said. "We want to see balanced trade. Otherwise this kind of trade would not be sustainabl­e."

The exact size and make-up of the sanctions could still change, said two people who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussion­s aren’t public. While Trump has repeatedly singled out China as a key trade violator, his toughest actions, such as withdrawin­g from an Asia-Pacific trade pact — which excluded China — and slapping tariffs on steel, have undermined relations with allies more than with the world’s second-biggest economy. While China presents measures to make its massive internal market more accessible to outsiders as part of its 40-year "reform and opening-up" process, the current emphasis directly answers complaints that Trump and his advisers use to support their claim that the US is being taken advantage of in trade. Li repeated a suggestion that the US ease restrictio­ns on exports of high-technology goods to China as a way to even the balance. "IP rights will be fully protected," he said. "We hope this important means to balance China-US trade will not be missed because that would be missing the good opportunit­y for making more money [sic]." Li spoke at the conclusion of a two-week meeting that included amending the constituti­on to scrap term limits for President Xi Jinping, the biggest overhaul of financial regulation since 2003, and the appointmen­t of Yi Gang as the first new central bank chief in 15 years. Communist Party leaders also elevated Xi’s chief economic adviser Liu He to vice-premier, giving him greater sway over policy areas that were traditiona­lly the domain of the premier. US companies, from Walmart to Amazon, warned Trump this week that any sweeping trade action against China could raise consumer prices, increase costs for businesses and hurt stock prices.-

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