Amid the soaring tension between the United States and China, US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, who is currently in Beijing, expressed the Biden administration is willing to improve trade relations with the President Xi Jinping-led-CCP government.
Chinese Commerce Secretary expressed support for improving trade conditions as Raimondo began a visit to Beijing as part of US efforts to improve chilly relations. Raimondo follows other American officials, including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in July, who have visited China in the past three months. They expressed optimism about improving communication but have announced no progress on disputes over technology, security, human rights and other issues that have plunged relations to their lowest level in decades.
What China wants from the US?
For its part, Chinese leader Xi Jinping's government wants to revive foreign investor interest in China as it tries to reverse a deepening economic slump. Beijing is ready to work together to “foster a more favourable policy environment for stronger cooperation” between US and Chinese businesses and “bolster bilateral trade and investment," Commerce Minister Wang Wentao told Raimondo. Wang gave no details of possible initiatives.
Raimondo said the two sides are working on establishing “new information exchanges” for “more consistent engagement.” “It is profoundly important that we have a stable economic relationship,” she said. “I believe that we can make progress if we are direct, open and practical.”
Why China did not hold any dialogue with the US for the past year?
Beijing broke off dialogue with Washington on military, climate and other issues in August 2022 in retaliation for a visit to Taiwan by then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi of the House of Representatives. The mainland's ruling Communist Party claims the self-ruled island democracy as part of its territory and objects to foreign governments having contact with it.
The state press has given positive coverage to the American visits to Beijing, but China has given no indication it might change trade, strategic, market access and other policies that irk Washington and its Asian neighbours.
A key Chinese complaint is limits on access to processor chips and other US technology on security grounds that threaten to hamper China's development of smartphones, artificial intelligence and other industries.
Wang visited Washington in May. The US government has also invited Foreign Minister Wang Yi to Washington, but plans for that have not been announced. Raimondo also was due to meet with China's No. 2 leader, Premier Li Qiang, and other officials during her two-day visit to Beijing and Shanghai.
(With inputs from agency)
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