Austin American-Statesman

US, China to discuss ‘balanced’ growth

Congress presses White House to raise tariffs

- David Lawder

GUANGZHOU, China – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Saturday that she and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng agreed to launch exchanges on “balanced” economic growth, an effort to address U.S. 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 anti-money laundering efforts in their respective financial 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 field for American workers and firms,” Yellen said in a statement released at the conclusion of the talks.

She characteri­zed 41⁄2 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 officials to rein in excess production capacity for electric vehicles, solar panels and other clean energy technology that threaten competing firms in the U.S. and other countries.

The Biden administra­tion is facing growing calls from lawmakers to increase tariffs 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.”

Yellen did not threaten to raise tariffs 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 U.S. Treasury official said.

“I think the Chinese realize how concerned we are about the implicatio­ns of their industrial strategy, for the United States, for the potential to flood our markets with exports that make it difficult for American firms to compete,” Yellen 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 officials were “more confident” 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,” confirming both parties had agreed to further discuss balanced growth and financial 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 Treasury official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the balanced growth forum was first proposed in February during an economic working group meeting.

While Treasury does not expect a major shift in Chinese policy after Yellen’s visit, officials 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 was set to continue her discussion­s on Monday in Beijing, where she is to meet officials including Premier Li Qiang, Finance Minister Lan Foan and People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng.

 ?? ?? Yellen
Yellen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States