Bangkok Post

Yellen eases concerns on China manufactur­ing

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>> GUANGZHOU: US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said yesterday that she and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng agreed to launch exchanges on balanced growth in domestic and global economies, an effort she said partly aimed at addressing US concerns about China’s excess manufactur­ing capacity.

After two days of economic talks in China’s southern export hub of Guangzhou, Ms Yellen said she and Mr He also agreed to start a forum to cooperate on anti-money 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”, Ms Yellen saidat the conclusion of the talks.

She characteri­sed the discussion­s as productive and frank. Coming into her four-day visit to China, her top priority was to try to persuade Chinese officials to rein in excess production capacity for electric vehicles, solar panels and other clean energy technology that are threatenin­g competing firms in the US and other countries.

Chinese state media pushed back on her excess capacity arguments, calling them a “pretext” for protection­ist US policies.

Such comments seek to undermine China’s domestic growth and internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and Washington should focus on fostering innovation and competitiv­eness within its own borders instead of resorting to “fear-mongering”, state news agency Xinhua said in an editorial late on Friday.

Ms Yellen, He Lifeng and their teams held over four and a half hours worth of meetings yesterday on a range of economic topics, with US concerns about China’s growing exports of electric vehicles, solar panels and other goods the biggest priority for the Treasury chief.

Ms Yellen was expected to speak with reporters later yesterday.

She told US businesspe­ople in China’s southern export hub of Guangzhou on Friday that concerns are growing over the global economic fallout from China’s excess manufactur­ing capacity, making the issue the focus of her four days of meetings with Chinese officials.

Citing China’s overproduc­tion of electric vehicles, solar panels, semiconduc­tors and other goods that are flooding into global markets in the face of a demand slump in China’s domestic market, Ms Yellen said this was not healthy for China and was hurting producers in other countries.

“Talking up ‘Chinese overcapaci­ty’ in the clean energy sector also smacks of creating a pretext for rolling out more protection­ist policies to shield US companies,” Xinhua said.

“After all, it is now known by the world that Washington will not hesitate to show its protection­ist teeth under the guise of national security in areas where its supremacy is challenged.”

Ms Yellen met with Vice Premier He Lifeng and Guangdong Province Governor Wang Weizhong in Guangzhou after arriving in China late on Thursday.

She was due to travel yesterday to Beijing to meet Premier Li Qiang and other officials.

 ?? ?? ‘BALANCED GROWTH’: US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen attends a press briefing at the Guangdong Zhudao Guest House, in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, yesterday.
‘BALANCED GROWTH’: US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen attends a press briefing at the Guangdong Zhudao Guest House, in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, yesterday.

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