China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China’s top envoy in US blasts critics of trade

‘Long and impressive list’ is result of ‘giant efforts’ by both nations: Cui

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington chenweihua@chinadaily­usa.com

Chinese Ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai had some harsh words for those who criticized the achievemen­ts made between China and the US during US President Donald Trump’s first state first visit to China last week.

While some believe the economic outcome of the visit was below their expectatio­ns, Cui said $250 billion is not a small number, referring to the bilateral trade and investment deals signed during Trump’s Nov 8-10 visit to Beijing.

“Of course some of the deals will have to be implemente­d. But such a long and impressive list is the outcome of the giant efforts of two government­s and two business communitie­s,” Cui told a crowd of mostly experts of US-China relations at the gala dinner of the US-China Policy Foundation in Washington on Wednesday.

“As long as there is sufficient political will, they will be implemente­d, and will benefit our two peoples.”

Cui said that some people may believe that it’s their job in the government to fight with other people over trade disputes.

“But I would suggest that it’s their responsibi­lity to build a strong and stable economic relationsh­ip between our two economies,” he said.

China has expressed deep dissatisfa­ction over the US government’s initiation in August of a Section 301 investigat­ion into China’s policies and practices of intellectu­al property, using what is widely deemed the outdated US Trade Act of 1974 that is inconsiste­nt with the principles of the World Trade Organizati­on.

China also has protested the US decision late last month to impose anti-dumping duties on Chinese aluminum foil.

“Indeed, we all owe it to our people that their aspiration for a better life will not be affected by any trade war, or any shortsight­ed, narrow-minded political schemes,” he said.

Cui, who has served in his current post since April 2013, suggested people who made accusation­s of US-China relations to study elementary economics, such as the concept of comparativ­e advantage, the virtues of competitio­n, the internatio­nal production chain, the value-added chain, and fundamenta­l change in the global economic structure.

Most economists believe that the bilateral trade deficit, which Trump complained about for a long time, does not matter. They believe the deficit has more to do with US domestic fiscal policy.

Joseph Gagnon, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington, said that economists broadly agree that trade barriers do not cause deficits.

“A country can have a trade deficit only if it is borrowing on net from the rest of the world. Trade barriers have only minor effects on borrowing and lending decisions,” he wrote on the institute’s website.

“Actually we learned all these things from our friends in the developed economies. But the problem today is that the preachers no longer believe in their own preaching,” Cui said, a pointed word that is clearly aimed at the growing protection­ism and anti-globalizat­ion sentiment in the West, including the United States.

As long as there is sufficient political will, they (the trade deals) will be implemente­d.” Cui Tiankai, China’s ambassador to US

 ?? YUAN ZHANG / CHINA DAILY ?? The 2017 honorees of The US-China Policy Foundation pose for a group photo at the 22nd Anniversar­y Gala Dinner in Washington on Wednesday evening. From left: Hongyi (Charlie) Jiang, chairman and CEO of China-US Sky Club; Stella Li, president of BYD...
YUAN ZHANG / CHINA DAILY The 2017 honorees of The US-China Policy Foundation pose for a group photo at the 22nd Anniversar­y Gala Dinner in Washington on Wednesday evening. From left: Hongyi (Charlie) Jiang, chairman and CEO of China-US Sky Club; Stella Li, president of BYD...

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