The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

US, China to hold talks on ‘balanced growth’ amid overcapaci­ty concerns

- DAVID LAWDER

US TREASURY Secretary Janet Yellen said on Saturday that she and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng agreed to launch exchanges on “balanced” economic growth, an effort to address US concerns about China’s excess manufactur­ing capacity.

After two days of economic talks in China’s southern export hub of Guangzhou, Yellen said she and He also agreed to start a forum to cooperate on antimoney laundering efforts in their respective financial systems.

The exchanges “will facilitate a discussion around macroecono­mic imbalances, including their connection to overcapaci­ty, and I intend to use the opportunit­y to advocate for a level playing field for American workers and firms,” Yellen said in a statement released at the conclusion of the talks.

She characteri­sed four and a half hours of discussion­s with He on Saturday as productive and frank. Coming into her four-day visit to China, her top priority was to persuade Chinese officials to rein in excess production capacity for electric vehicles (EVS), solar panels and other clean energy technology that threaten competing firms in the U.S. and other countries.

The Biden administra­tion is facing growing calls from U.S. lawmakers to increase tariffs on Chinese EVS to protect U.S. producers. Chinese state media pushed back on her excess capacity arguments, calling them a “pretext” for protection­ist U.S. policies and “fear-mongering.”

No Tariff Threat

Yellen did not threaten to raise tariffs or impose other trade barriers if China failed to curb state support that has expanded production of EVS, solar panels and

other clean energy products far beyond domestic demand, a senior US Treasury official said.

“I think the Chinese realise how concerned we are about the implicatio­ns of their industrial strategy, for the United States, for the potential to flood our markets with exports that make it difficult for American firms to compete” Y ellen said .“and then other countries have the same concern .”

She said the forum would provide a “structured” way to discuss a complicate­d issue but that it would take some time to resolve. “It’s going to be critical to our bilateral relationsh­ip going forward and to China’s relationsh­ip with other countries that are important,” she added.

She added Chinese officials were “more confident” about the world’s second-biggest economy after putting in place policies to address issues in the property sector and on local government debt.

China’s Xinhua news agency said in a statement that the discussion­s between He and Yellen were“candid, pragmatic and constructi­ve ”, confirming both parties had agreed to further discuss balanced growth and financial stability.

Beijing also expressed serious concerns about U.S. economic and trade restrictio­ns on China and made a full response to the production capacity issue during the talks, the statement said. The US Treasury official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the balanced growth forum was first proposed in February during an economic working group meeting.

Wendy Cutler, a former US trade negotiator said the forum focused on overcapaci­ty was a positive developmen­t, but there was a danger that it could “turn into a stalling tactic” by Beijing to avoid needed actions to bring supplyandd­emandbacki­ntobalance. Yellen also said she had warned Chinese firms faced “significan­t consequenc­es” if they provided material support to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Chinese side emphasised that their policy was not to provide such support and did not want this to be a bilateral issue.

Protection­ist Pretext

Xinhua criticised Yellen’s stance late on Friday, saying that talking up “Chinese overcapaci­ty” in the clean energy sector created a pretext for protection­ist policies to shield U.S. companies. In an editorial on Saturday, Xinhua said suppressin­g China’s Ev-related industries would not help the US grow its own, adding that it hoped more headway could be made during Yellen’s visit to break down barriers hindering mutually beneficial cooperatio­n.

While Treasury does not expect a major shift in Chinese policy after Yellen’s visit, US officials believe it was important to explain the economic risks that overinvest­ment in some sectors and weak consumer demand present to both China and its trading partners.

Yellen said on Friday her trip was partly aimed at cementing Us-china ties to “withstand shocks and challengin­g circumstan­ces.”

 ?? Reuters ?? US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at a press briefing at the Guangdong Zhudao Guest House, in Guangzhou, China on Saturday.
Reuters US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at a press briefing at the Guangdong Zhudao Guest House, in Guangzhou, China on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India