CHINA / National |
Bush thanks Wu Yi for making 'equitable trade'(chinadaily.com.cn - AP)Updated: 2006-04-13 09:23 A string of commitments made by China to narrow Sino-American trade gap has shown China's goodwill, said Vice-Premier Wu Yi who is leading a big business delegation visiting and shopping in the United States.
US President George W. Bush thanked Madam Wu Yi at a meeting at the White House Wednesday for "efforts to make US-China trade more equitable", said White House press secretary Scott McClellan. Wu told a press conference that Chinese companies had signed 107 contracts with US firms worth US$16.2 billion. The agreements cover sectors ranging from airplanes, electronics, auto parts, heavy equipment, software to cotton and soybeans. "It's progress and ... now we will look forward to seeing results," said McClellan. He said he looked forward to the upcoming visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao, adding that he expected to exchange views with Hu on U.S.-China relations and other major issues of common concern. Bush also reaffirmed his persistent position on the Taiwan issue. Chinese President Hu Jintao will visit the United States next week. Bush said that he would like to hear him to "explain to the American people how China will meet the challenge of rectifying global economic imbalances", McClellan said. According to an Associated Press report, the Republicans in the United
States, though supporters of Bush's free-trade policies, are beginning to worry
they could suffer in the upcoming congressional elections unless the US trade
picture begins to improve. American industry groups were generally pleased with the results of an annual meeting of the Sino-US Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, which was created in 1983 to resolve trade frictions between the two nations. Frank Vargo, vice president for international trade at the National Association of Manufacturers, called the business deals which China signed "incremental contributions to the removal of trade obstacles." The talks on Tuesday were led by US Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez and US Trade Representative Rob Portman, both of whom praised the Chinese for the commitments they did make. "In our discussions today, which were very frank and positive, we were able to solve some problems," Portman said at a joint closing news conference. Wu said China has been "earnestly implementing" the directions of China's top leaders to boost imports from the United States. Beijing has requested the United States to allow more high-tech US products to be exported to China, to effectively narrow the bilateral trade imbalance. China agreed to move to lift the beef ban it imposed after the first case of mad cow disease was discovered in the United States in December 2003 but said it would do so only after certain technical issues were resolved. U.S. Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns predicted those details would soon be worked but he refused to give a timetable of when beef shipments could resume. On copyright piracy, China agreed to require that all computers sold in the country be loaded with legal operating software and to increase enforcement efforts against all forms of copyright piracy. China also made commitments to streamline the approval of American medical devices for sale in China, to adjust capital requirements that American telecommunications companies see as a major barrier to setting up Chinese operations and to make sure new rules do not discriminate against U.S. express delivery firms.
|
|