China and the United States are expected to make
tangible progress on trade and services in the second round of the strategic
economic dialogue.
US Ambassador to China
Clark Randt Jr (L) and US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson (2nd L) greet
China's Vice Premier Wu Yi upon her arrival at Andrews Air Force Base near
Washington May 21, 2007. [Reuters]
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Vice-Premier Wu Yi, who leads the Chinese delegation to Washington, wrote an
opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal on the eve of the talks. She said the
United States should lift its restrictions on hi-tech exports to China, a topic
likely to be high on the Chinese delegation's agenda.
Wu said the move will help to address the trade imbalance between the two
countries, which the US is concerned about.
The two-day dialogue, which opens today, is also expected to prevent the US
from taking action to force revaluation of the renminbi.
In return, Washington expects China to further open its financial market
although China has fulfilled its commitments to the World Trade Organization.
Unnamed sources were quoted by the Financial Times as saying staff-level
negotiators have agreed that foreigners should be allowed to buy a 49-percent
stake in all but the biggest five Chinese banks, up from the current maximum of
25 percent. But top Chinese officials apparently have not signed any agreement
on this.
US officials also expect Beijing to relax limits on foreign ownership of at
least some securities firms and they want a higher quota for foreign investment
in the stock market.
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the two sides had reached consensus
in principle on a number of issues and what they were now discussing were "the
signposts and tangible specific steps to be taken to show progress".
The two countries are also scheduled to discuss a wide range of issues, such
as opening more commercial air routes between the two, increasing domestic
demand in China for clean coal energy, and facilitating tourism.
Meanwhile, senior officials from both sides said it was more important to
stick with a long-term approach to resolving bilateral trade disputes, rather
than concentrating on specific issues.
The strategic economic dialogue serves as a long-term and far-reaching
platform between the two sides, said Wang Xinpei, spokesman with the Ministry of
Commerce. He said the second round of the meeting should yield positive progress
as the presidents of both countries, who initiated the talks, expect.
"As the largest developing country and the largest developed country in the
world China and the United States still largely complement each other
economically," Wang said.
The dialogue comes at a time when the two countries are facing increasing
trade disputes, and rising trade protectionism in the United States.
The Chinese central bank announced late last week that the band in which the
yuan will be allowed to fluctuate against the dollar each day will be widened
from 0.3 percent to 0.5 percent above or below the previous day's closing value.
(China Daily 05/22/2007 page5)