Yellen arrives in Beijing for economic talks
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen arrived in Beijing on Thursday afternoon with the goal of finding areas of common economic ground and opening communication channels amid an increasingly turbulent relationship between the world’s two biggest economies.
It will be the first major test of a policy she outlined in April that’s geared toward defending and securing U.S. national security without trying to hold China back economically.
Yellen’s arrival comes days after China imposed restrictions on exporting two metals that are crucial to key technology industries, the latest escalation in a trade war that ramped up last year with U.S. export controls on semiconductors and chipmaking equipment.
Restrictions eyed
The U.S. also is considering restrictions on China’s access to cloud computing, according to a person familiar with the discussions.
Yellen touched down in China exactly five years after the Trump administration imposed tariffs on the first wave of more than $300 billion of goods from China — duties that President Joe Biden has kept in place despite Yellen’s criticism of them. Yellen will meet with Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Beijing Friday, a senior Treasury official said.
“Relations have not improved but the U.S. has increasingly realized — so has Europe — that the degree of economic interdependence with China is such that decoupling is impossible,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis. “In other words, there is no way out through the back door: dialogue is needed.”
Yellen’s visit was among the topics most frequently asked
about by local Chinese clients speaking to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists in recent days, according to a note published by the investment bank Wednesday. Clients were also looking for insight on Us-china relations, the note said.
Her trip follows that of Secretary of State Antony Blinken last month and adds to broader efforts by the Biden administration to re-engage with its chief geopolitical rival amid an uncertain global economic outlook that could also suffer from fragmentation.
Yellen has for months hoped to visit the Chinese capital, but an escalation in tensions stemming from then-house Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip last year to Taiwan — which Beijing claims as part of China — and the flight of a Chinese balloon over the US left the plans in limbo.
Tariff efficacy
On the trade front, Yellen has questioned the efficacy of the U.S. tariffs in the past, saying they contribute to inflation and suggesting they could be rolled back. Biden briefly raised expectations for removal of the duties a year ago, when he said that he was reviewing their impact on consumer prices as inflation surged, but nothing came of those discussions.
The economic pressure to remove them has waned as inflation slowed, and the political pressure to keep them has increased as tensions with Beijing flared. That makes their continuation the most likely scenario, analysts say.
Still, while in Beijing, Yellen will seek to find common ground on other issues. She will meet with senior Chinese government officials to discuss the importance of responsibly managing the U.s.-china relationship, communicating directly about areas of concern, and working together to address global challenges like climate change and debt distress in poorer nations.
A key priority for the Treasury has been pressing Beijing to boost debt relief for developing nations, where China has become one of the largest creditors. Yellen’s visit will follow a recent agreement in principle for Zambia, which she has praised.
Breakthroughs unlikely
And while a Treasury official sought to manage expectations, saying a major breakthrough was unlikely, the department hopes the trip will help build longer-term channels of communication with the Chinese government’s new economic team.
David Loevinger, a managing director in the Emerging Markets Group of TCW, said it’s shocking how little the U.S. and Chinese governments speak at all levels, pointing to the fact that key economic officials in both countries don’t know each other.
Restarting such dialog is key given recent clouds over China’s economic outlook.
Chinese authorities have cut interest rates and adopted measures to shore up the property market, which has suffered from an overhang of leverage and construction.
Policymakers are also increasingly concerned about demographic issues including a declining population and a high youth unemployment rate.
“It’s vital that policymakers understand what’s going on in the other country,” said Loevinger, a former senior coordinator for China affairs at the Treasury.