Los Angeles Times

American companies have the most to lose, says Premier Li Keqiang while defending globalizat­ion

- By Jonathan Kaiman and Jessica Meyers jonathan.kaiman@latimes.com Twitter: @JRKaiman Meyers is a special correspond­ent.

BEIJING — Chinese Premier Li Keqiang cautioned the U.S. against starting a trade war and positioned Beijing as a leading proponent of globalizat­ion at a news conference Wednesday, underscori­ng the extent to which Donald Trump’s presidency has pushed China into a global leadership role.

“We don’t want to see a trade war breaking out,” Li said at the news conference, a highly scripted annual ritual in a gold-bedecked meeting room at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People. American companies, he said, would suffer the most in a trade battle between the world’s two largest economies.

Li, China’s second-highest-ranking official after President Xi Jinping, framed the U.S.-China relationsh­ip as having “bright prospects,” adding that officials were working to arrange a meeting between Xi and President Trump. (He did not confirm media reports that it would take place at Trump’s Florida resort Mar-a-Lago in early April.)

His rhetoric was a stark departure from last year’s news conference, when Li barely mentioned globalizat­ion and took only one question in regard to China’s role in the global economy.

“As for how to ensure the healthy developmen­t of China-U.S. ties, I believe both countries need to act in keeping with the principles of equality and mutual benefit,” he said, reiteratin­g a long-held party line.

The premier’s news conference is at its heart an act of political theater: Questions are preselecte­d, Li’s responses well-rehearsed. Yet the government’s choice of topic matter provides some insight into its most pressing concerns.

Li, in a question-and-answer session that lasted nearly two hours, downplayed fears about structural risks to China’s economy, pledged to “fight and win a battle on smog,” and advocated for economic cooperatio­n between the mainland and Hong Kong. He also projected an image of China as open to foreign investment and as a leader in globalizat­ion and free trade.

“China will continue to remain engaged in the liberaliza­tion of global trade,” he said. “We believe that it is important for one to see the opportunit­ies of opening up in globalizat­ion.”

China faces a slew of domestic problems; critics say its human rights record, censorship, and business environmen­t for foreign enterprise­s have worsened since Xi took power in late 2012. Tensions over the South China Sea and Taiwan continue to escalate.

Trump’s “America First” foreign policy doctrine and his harsh tone on China, both as a presidenti­al nominee and now as president, have sparked fear of an economic showdown.

Trump has accused China of manipulati­ng its currency, economical­ly “raping” the U.S. and creating “the concept of global warming” as a hoax to undercut U.S. manufactur­ing. His top advisor on trade is Peter Navarro, a hawkish business professor at UC Irvine who directed a documentar­y called “Death by China.”

Moreover, Trump’s public disparagem­ent of multilater­al institutio­ns such as the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance, the United Nations and the Paris climate change pact have pushed China into a role as the world’s foremost defender of those institutio­ns, global trade and the fight against climate change.

China, a major beneficiar­y of internatio­nal trade, has sought to present itself as a force for global stability. In January, Xi called for openness and economic integratio­n at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, marking the first time China’s top leader has addressed the meeting of global elites.

The state-run New China News Agency, in an editorial on Monday, took a thinly veiled swipe at the Trump administra­tion.

“Xi’s experience, commitment, determinat­ion and ability to govern and lead have become something of a rarity on the global political stage,” it said.

Li’s news conference capped off China’s annual “two sessions,” a concurrent meeting of the country’s top legislatur­e — the National People’s Congress — and the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, an advisory body.

Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, said this year’s meetings were “reassuring­ly dour,” a reminder that the party’s greatest dramas are playing out behind the scenes.

At Li’s news conference, no reporters addressed Internet censorship or human rights. Li also made no mention of the 19th Communist Party congress, a major meeting to be held this year that will see changes in the top leadership.

Xi is already China’s most powerful leader in decades. If he does not promote a clear successor this year, Tsang said, he may be gearing up to extend his tenure beyond 2022. “This is an arrangemen­t that’s facing a lot of resistance within the party,” he said.

“Nothing much actually happened [at the two sessions], and that’s what was meant to be,” Tsang said. “The big event this year is the 19th party congress. It’s going to be so big — and so much is not yet decided — that nobody really wants to take any risks.”

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