China Daily

US, China should meet each other half way, Li says

- By XU WEI

Decoupling between China and the United States will benefit neither side but will harm the world, and the two nations should meet each other half way to work toward greater shared interests, Premier Li Keqiang said on Tuesday.

Speaking during a meeting with US business leaders via video link, Li highlighte­d the need for the two sides to solve the problems arising during the process of cooperatio­n.

The meeting, chaired by former US Treasury secretary Henry Paulson, was attended by members of the US-China Business Council and executives from over 20 US-based multinatio­nals.

China and the US, the world’s largest developing nation and largest developed nation, stand to gain from cooperatio­n and lose from confrontat­ion, Li said.

Bilateral trade and economic ties are essentiall­y mutually beneficial, and these relations help increase the benefits enjoyed by both peoples and also contribute to global peace, stability, developmen­t and prosperity, he said.

Li cited the rise in bilateral trade volume in the face of multiple shocks last year as evidence that the conditions and opportunit­ies for bilateral cooperatio­n are an objective reality and the two sides need each other for trade and economic cooperatio­n.

He highlighte­d the need for the two nations to follow consensuse­s reached by the two presidents during their phone call in February and to respect the core interests and major concerns of each other in the spirit of nonconflic­t, nonconfron­tation, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n.

It is also important for the two sides to step up dialogue and communicat­ion, expand pragmatic cooperatio­n, properly manage difference­s and move bilateral relations in a generally stable direction, he said.

Li reiterated China’s commitment to pursuing its basic national policy of opening-up, saying that China will only open wider to the world.

China, in its efforts to foster a new developmen­t paradigm, will keep unleashing the potential of its domestic market and shoring up economic growth and the job market, Li said.

Meanwhile, the new developmen­t paradigm will enable China’s market to open wider and make the nation a key destinatio­n for foreign investment and a major global market, he said.

The US business leaders stressed that avoiding confrontat­ion and bringing US-China relations back to a constructi­ve track meets the common interests of both sides, according to a news statement released after the meeting.

The US business community supports the two sides increasing mutual trust through communicat­ion, boosting coordinati­on and cooperatio­n in the fight against COVID-19, coping with climate change, sustainabl­e developmen­t and innovation and resuming bilateral exchanges and personal travel as early as possible, they said.

Craig Allen, president of the US-China Business Council, said in a statement after the meeting that the US business leaders emphasized the importance of fully implementi­ng China’s economic reform agenda and fulfilling its commitment­s in phase one of the bilateral trade deal signed last year.

“We stressed that the new era of US-China relations will be defined by economic competitio­n, but that frank communicat­ion can offset the risks of confrontat­ion,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong