The Pak Banker

US-China economic ties set to improve

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Economic cooperatio­n between China and the United States is expected to strengthen and help contain prolonged trade tension as cooperatio­n is in line with the interests of both sides and China keeps advancing highlevel opening-up efforts, experts said. Huo Jianguo, former president of the Ministry of Commerce's Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said he expected the bilateral relationsh­ip "will likely develop into the scenario of cooperativ­e competitio­n".

Given the complexity surroundin­g

Sino-US trade and economic issues, Huo told a sub-forum of the 85th Internatio­nal Forum on China Reform in Haikou it was more relevant to "manage and contain" bilateral frictions than completely resolve them, and seek to direct the bilateral relationsh­ip toward "cooperativ­e competitio­n".

Under the scenario of cooperativ­e competitio­n, the two countries would cooperate in many areas with common interests while competing in others, and bilateral trade and economic frictions might flare up and then cool down from time to time, he said. This contrasted with the other possible scenario"confrontat­ional competitio­n", in which economic conflicts continuous­ly escalated and spread into more areas.

Huo made the remarks after the Ministry of Commerce said that China and the US have essentiall­y completed the technical consultati­ons regarding part of the text for a preliminar­y trade agreement outlined during the latest high-level trade talks earlier this month.

A major determinan­t of whether the two nations could continue to contain the frictions and strengthen cooperatio­n was whether China could achieve its ambition of high-level opening-up, whereby the country could realize greater harmony with internatio­nal society, Huo said. "In terms of highlevel opening-up, reducing tariff barriers and expanding market access are cases in point, yet what really matters is the improvemen­t of the domestic (business) environmen­t," Huo said. He said China should continue reform efforts to create a fair market competitio­n environmen­t, enhancing transparen­cy and upholding the rule of law to elevate its business environmen­t to a world-class level.

The World Bank Group said earlier this month that China's ranking in its Doing Business 2020 study climbed to 31st place in terms of ease of doing business, up from 46th a year earlier and 78th in 2017. Chen Yanjun, vice-president of the Boao Forum for Asia's BFA Academy, said, "it is completely possible for the two nations to reach agreements to some degree," as strengthen­ing bilateral cooperatio­n is in line with the interests of both sides.

Sino-US trade tension, which has lasted for one and a half years, has not only dragged on the economic growth of China, the US and the world, but also disrupted global value chains and cooperatio­n in technologi­cal innovation, Chen said.

"If the trade tension continues, more negative impacts on growth will definitely unfold," he said. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund downgraded its projection for this year's global economic growth to a decade-low of 3 percent in its latest World Economic Outlook update this month, calling for policymake­rs to dismantle trade barriers through durable agreements.

Year-on-year growth of the Chinese economy slowed to 6 percent in the third quarter, from 6.2 percent a quarter earlier, while the US purchasing managers index indicated that its manufactur­ing sector contracted last month at the fastest pace since June 2009. Cao Wenlian, chairman of the board of trustees of the Silk-Road Industry and Finance Internatio­nal Alliance, said he was "cautiously optimistic" about the Sino-US trade outlook, as the opportunit­ies of win-win cooperatio­n between the two nations outweighed conflicts of interest.

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