Khaleej Times

US will not accept Chinese imports decimating new industries, says Yellen

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US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned China on Monday that Washington will not accept new industries being decimated by Chinese imports, as she wrapped up four days of meetings to press her case for Beijing to rein in excess industrial capacity.

Yellen told a press conference that US President Joe Biden would not allow a repeat of the “China shock” of the early 2000s, when a flood of Chinese imports destroyed about two million American manufactur­ing jobs.

She did not, however, threaten new tariffs or other trade actions should Beijing continue its massive state support for electric vehicles, batteries, solar panels and other green energy goods.

Yellen used her second trip to China in nine months to complain that Beijing’s overinvest­ment has built factory capacity far exceeding domestic demand, while fastgrowin­g exports of these products threaten companies in the US and other countries. She said a newly created exchange forum to discuss the excess capacity issue would need time to reach solutions.

Yellen drew parallels to the pain felt in the US steel sector in the past. “We’ve seen this story before,” she told reporters. “Over a decade ago, massive PRC (People’s Republic of China) government support led to below-cost Chinese steel that flooded the global market and decimated industries across the world and in the US.”

Yellen added: “I’ve made it clear that President Biden and I will not accept that reality again.”

When the global market is flooded with artificial­ly cheap Chinese products, she said, “the viability of American and other foreign firms is put into question.”

Yellen said her exchanges with Chinese officials had advanced American interests and that US concerns over excess industrial capacity were shared by Washington’s European allies, Japan, Mexico, the Philippine­s and other emerging markets.

Pushback

China’s Vice-finance Minister, Liao Min, told Chinese media that Beijing “has fully responded” to US questions on overcapaci­ty and expressed “grave concern” over restrictio­ns Washington imposes on trade and investment.

Liao said China’s “current competitiv­e advantages are rooted in China’s large-scale market, complete industrial system and abundant human resources,” decrying the “escalation of green protection­ist measures by some developed economies”.

“China will not sit idly and ignore it,” Liao said in remarks published on the ministry’s website.

China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress, said in March the government would take steps to curb industrial overcapaci­ty. But Beijing says the recent focus by the US and Europe on the risks from China’s excess capacity is misguided.

Chinese officials say the criticism understate­s innovation by companies in China and overstates the importance of state support in driving their growth. They also say tariffs or other trade curbs will deprive global consumers of green energy alternativ­es key to meeting global climate goals.

Trade curbs on Chinese EVS would contravene World Trade Organisati­on rules, the industry and informatio­n technology ministry said in a statement.

The Chinese ministry added that it was committed to support EV exports and would help “accelerate the overseas developmen­t” of the industry including planning for shipping and logistics and support for firms to innovate and meet global standards.

Yellen suggested a possible short-term solution was for China to bolster consumer demand with support for households and shift its growth model away from supplyside investment­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? China’s vice-minister of finance Liao Min (second right) and US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns (right) receive Yellen.
— AFP China’s vice-minister of finance Liao Min (second right) and US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns (right) receive Yellen.

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