BusinessMirror

Xi Jinping set to address Davos in first remarks during Biden era

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CHINESE President Xi Jinping is set to deliver his first speech since Joe Biden entered the White House, remarks that could set the tone for relations between the world’s biggest economies over the next four years.

Xi will speak later Monday at the Davos Agenda event, which he last addressed in 2017 days before Donald Trump took office. At the time, Xi warned that a trade war would hurt both sides while stressing China’s openness and condemning protection­ism. Chinese state media has recently promoted that speech, casting Xi as a visionary.

Xi’s earlier address “illuminate­d the turbulent world economic voyage” and “transcends time and space,” Qiushi Journal, a bimonthly magazine published by the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Committee, said in an editorial last month.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel were also slated to be among the speakers at the online event hosted by the World Economic Forum from Monday to Friday. The in-person meeting, which is usually held in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, has been postponed due to the pandemic and is now scheduled to take place in May in Singapore.

The landscape is much different for Xi than four years ago. The Trump administra­tion has since moved to impose tariffs on Chinese exports, sanction officials over moves to restrict freedoms in Hong Kong and Xinjiang and deny vital technology to some of China’s biggest companies. Xi has since emphasized a “dual circulatio­n” policy that prioritize­s self-sufficienc­y.

Biden’s team has signaled it would continue to hold a tough line on China while seeking cooperatio­n in areas like climate change. In its first week, the US issued statements blasting China for sanctionin­g Trump officials and for a military show of force against Taiwan. China’s foreign ministry has called for bilateral relations to be “rebuilt and repaired” while asserting the right to defend its interests.

Biden hasn’t given many specifics on how he would deal with the thorniest issues between the countries, including export curbs on companies like Huawei Technologi­es Co., data security regarding apps like Bytedance Ltd.’s Tiktok and tariffs on almost $500 billion of products. But he has signaled a shift from confrontat­ion to competitio­n, with members of his administra­tion calling for greater investment­s in the US to “outcompete” China.

Xi is speaking from a position of strength: China has been the only major economy to report growth amid the pandemic last year. Economists are forecastin­g an expansion of 8.3 percent this year, compared with 4.1 percent in the US. Xi recently committed China to be carbonneut­ral by 2060, although Beijing has revealed few details on how it plans to achieve the target.

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XI Bloomberg Photo

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