South China Morning Post

Relations continue to thaw in face-to-face meeting

World’s two largest economies hold ‘candid and pragmatic’ talks in Detroit

- Khushboo Razdan khushboo.razdan@scmp.com

Commerce Minister Wang Wentao sat down with US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai in Detroit Michigan on Friday, continuing a resumption of high level face-to-face talks on trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

The talks followed Wang’s meeting with US Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo on Thursday in Washington.

Wang’s meeting with Tai came on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) session in Detroit.

A statement by the Commerce Ministry said the two sides had “candid, pragmatic and in-depth” exchanges on “economic and trade relations and regional and multilater­al issues of common concern while agreeing to continue to communicat­e”.

“The Chinese side raised concerns on key issues such as the US economic and trade policy toward China, Taiwan-related issues in the economic and trade field, the Indo-Pacific economic framework, and Section 301 tariffs,” it read.

A read-out from Tai’s office said the trade ambassador “highlighte­d the need to address the critical imbalances caused by China’s state-led, non-market approach to the economy and trade policy”, while raising concerns about China’s actions against US firms operating there.

“The importance of the US-China trade ties in the global economy and the need for both sides to continue engaging” was also discussed, it noted, adding that Tai stressed the importance of maintainin­g open lines of communicat­ion and building on the engagement between US President Joe Biden and President Xi Jinping in Indonesia in November.

During the news conference at the end of the Apec session, Tai reiterated the “benefit of sitting down and having a conversati­on” to “understand each other better and how we are experienci­ng the impacts that we have on each other’s economies”.

On Thursday, Wang told Raimondo of China’s displeasur­e over the Biden administra­tion’s trade policies that restricted exports of certain semiconduc­tors to China and its plans to bar some US investment there.

Like Tai, Raimondo raised the “recent spate of PRC actions taken against US companies operating in the PRC” and also discussed “the overall environmen­t in both countries for trade and investment and areas for potential cooperatio­n”, according to the commerce department.

In 2018, then-US president Donald Trump, complainin­g that China was stealing American manufactur­ing jobs and dumping its cheap products in the US, imposed punitive tariffs on Chinse imports and started a trade war.

Biden, who became president in 2021, has largely stuck to those policies while also imposing strict export controls in core technologi­es like advanced semiconduc­tors and artificial intelligen­ce.

In apparent retaliatio­n, Beijing last week banned the US semiconduc­tor producer Micron from key infrastruc­ture projects and cracked down on due diligence firms that help multinatio­nal companies invest in China. The commerce department said the moves were “not based in facts”.

At the Apec news conference, Tai refused to comment on Washington’s planned response to China’s blacklisti­ng of Micron.

After months of no high-level communicat­ion after the downing of a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon that had crossed the US, Biden predicted a “thaw” during his G7 trip to Japan last week. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who cancelled his visit to Beijing after the balloon incident, is also looking to reschedule.

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan this month met top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi in Vienna. The talks were described as constructi­ve by both sides.

Last Monday, Wang Wentao met representa­tives of American companies operating in Shanghai, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

“China will continue to welcome US-funded enterprise­s to develop in China and achieve win-win results,” he told them.

 ?? Photo: Handout ?? US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai and Commerce Minister Wang Wentao shake hands at the Apec session in Detroit.
Photo: Handout US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai and Commerce Minister Wang Wentao shake hands at the Apec session in Detroit.

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