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Chinese express doubts about relations with US under Trump

- By Christophe­r Bodeen Associated Press

A Chinese man holds up a Chinese newspaper with the front page photo of Donald Trump and the headline “Outsider counter attack” at a newsstand in Beijing, China. China views a Trump presidency with less trepidatio­n.

BEIJING — People in Beijing expressed doubts Saturday about President Donald Trump’s ability to steer the U.S. economy and manage China-American relations, underscori­ng concerns over trade, Taiwan and other issues.

While Trump didn’t mention China in his inaugural address Friday, he referred often to the country during the campaign and upended diplomatic protocol after the election by speaking on the phone with the president of self-governing Taiwan, the island China considers its own territory.

Aaron Wang, who works for a logistics company, said he hoped for the best but was wary of Trump’s threat to disrupt commerce between the countries, including imposing a 45 percent tariff on Chinese imports.

“I will wait and see what Trump actually does in the future, but I do hope that the China-U.S. relations can develop in a good direction under Trump’s presidency,” said Wang.

A retired teacher, who would only give her surname, Wei, said Trump hadn’t yet shown that he could handle the U.S. presidency.

“It’s really uncertain whether he can properly run the U.S.,” Wei said. “A business person can run a country very well, but he can also do a very bad job.”

On a visit to Beijing, Dunkin’ Brands CEO Nigel Davis said he wanted to reinforce the importance of global free trade to Trump, who opposes the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p and has suggested he might renegotiat­e the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement.

“I will give him concrete examples and talk to him about how you can overcome obstacles,” Davis told The Associated Press.

China is the world’s second-largest economy behind the U.S., and Trump railed during his campaign against alleged Chinese cheating at trade and manipulati­on of its currency. Those assertions came despite evidence that for the past couple of years, China has been intervenin­g in markets to prop up its currency, not push it lower in a manner that would benefit exporters to the detriment of U.S. businesses.

China’s economy slowed over the past year and exports fell back into contractio­n last month, signaling renewed weakness as it faces possible trade tensions under Trump. However, China still sells considerab­ly more to the United States than it buys, resulting in a trade deficit in goods amounted to $289 billion through the first 10 months of 2016.

In a commentary on Trump’s inaugural address, the official Global Times newspaper said he had made a number of “lofty promises” but offered few details on how he intended to carry them out.

“It remains to be seen if he can keep his ambitious File, Ng Han Guan / The Associated Press promise throughout his term — correcting the domestic and foreign policies and the world order he believes to have strayed off track,” the paper said.

The commentary also stated that Trump has yet to formulate a China policy despite his constant references to the country during the presidenti­al election campaign.

“His China policy will hinge on how well he understand­s the overlappin­g interests of the world’s two largest economies, how their national interests intertwine, and whether he is motivated to change the existing structure with force,” the paper said.

Along with stating that relations with Beijing were open for re-negotiatio­n, Trump has criticized China’s creation of man-made islands in the South China Sea furnished with airstrips and military infrastruc­ture.

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