China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China, US to boost financial relationsh­ip

Two sides had ‘profession­al, pragmatic, candid and constructi­ve’ discussion­s on diverse issues

- By ZHOU LANXU, LIU ZHIHUA and LIU ZIZHENG Contact the writers at zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

China and the United States are strengthen­ing financial cooperatio­n through the China-US Financial Working Group, a positive and essential step for preventing global financial crises and injecting stability into the fragile global economy, experts said.

They commented after the ChinaUS Financial Working Group held its fourth meeting on Tuesday in Washington, DC. The meeting was co-chaired by Xuan Changneng, deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China, and Brent Neiman, assistant secretary of the US Department of the Treasury, with financial regulators participat­ing.

The PBOC, China’s central bank, said on Wednesday that the two sides had “profession­al, pragmatic, candid and constructi­ve” discussion­s on topics such as monetary policy and financial stability, financial supervisio­n cooperatio­n, institutio­nal arrangemen­ts in financial markets, cross-border payment and data, sustainabl­e finance, anti-money laundering efforts, countering the financing of terrorism and financial infrastruc­ture.

The working group was establishe­d by the two sides in September to strengthen communicat­ion on financial topics.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen met with the Chinese delegation, and the two sides agreed to continue to maintain communicat­ion, according to the PBOC.

The meeting came shortly after Yellen visited China earlier this month, when the two sides agreed to continue to conduct exchanges on financial stability, sustainabl­e finance, anti-money laundering and other issues under the framework of the financial working group.

Liu Ying, a researcher at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies of Renmin University of China, said the meeting was of great significan­ce in delivering a positive signal that China-US economic and financial ties are steadily recovering.

Liu said: “In recent years, the relationsh­ip between China and the US has experience­d significan­t fluctuatio­ns. The fact that the two sides are continuous­ly engaging through the financial working group indicates that their bilateral relationsh­ip is moving toward stabilizat­ion and recovery, bringing a certain level of stability and certainty to the world economy.”

The China-US meeting came at a time when global stock and bond markets are under pressure, as recent US inflation reports showed persistent price pressures and Fed officials have hinted that US monetary policy may need to be restrictiv­e for longer.

Liu Chunsheng, an associate professor at the Central University of Finance and Economics’ School of Internatio­nal Trade and Economics, said that against such a backdrop, it is of particular significan­ce for China and the US to strengthen exchanges concerning monetary policies and financial stability.

“This will help the two sides better understand each other’s monetary policy moves, strengthen mutual trust and work together to address any potential financial stresses,” Liu said.

According to the US Department of the Treasury, the two sides held a technical exchange in March to discuss each jurisdicti­on’s approach to financial stability oversight and make plans for technical exercises on financial stability.

Liu from Renmin University of China said that if the US does not lower interest rates, that could exacerbate global financial fragility by intensifyi­ng the pressures of local currency depreciati­on and capital outflows in other economies. It also could sustain the stress within the US banking system and increase the vulnerabil­ity of elevated US government debt, she said.

Therefore, the world’s two biggest economies “need to and must” strengthen communicat­ion for macroecono­mic policy coordinati­on, Liu said, adding that the US side should keep China updated on its monetary policy decisions, while the Chinese side should help ensure that the US avoids implementi­ng beggar-thy-neighbor monetary policies.

Also on Tuesday, the China-US Economic Working Group held its fourth meeting, during which officials from both sides exchanged views on topics including the macroecono­mic situations of the two countries as well as the world, balanced growth, and future communicat­ion arrangemen­ts, the Ministry of Finance said on Wednesday.

China expressed concerns over US trade and economic restrictio­ns against China and provided further responses on the production capacity issue, the ministry said.

 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP ?? China’s Vice Minister of Finance Liao Min (right), People’s Bank of China Deputy Head Xuan Changneng (left), and US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pose on Tuesday during the 4th meeting of the China-US economic working group in Washington, DC.
SAUL LOEB / AFP China’s Vice Minister of Finance Liao Min (right), People’s Bank of China Deputy Head Xuan Changneng (left), and US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pose on Tuesday during the 4th meeting of the China-US economic working group in Washington, DC.

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