BEIJING - Following the highly anticipated summit between President Xi Jinping and his U.S. counterpart, Joe Biden, recently, there is growing optimism that increased communication, dialogue and consultation between the world's two largest economies will strengthen cooperation, align common interests and add much-needed certainty to the evolving global landscape.
Bilateral economic and trade cooperation, long seen as the
stabilizing force and driving factor in China-U.S. relations, is among the
first to experience a thaw, as a series of dialogues and exchanges in this
regard has sent a positive signal to both sides and the global economy.
DISCUSSIONS MATTER
One of the key consensuses reached between China and the
United States during the San Francisco summit meeting is that the two sides
decided to step up high-level interactions, and agreed to start consultations
on extending the China-U.S. Science and Technology Cooperation Agreement, and
on resuming the China-U.S. Joint Committee on Cooperation in Agriculture.
Rather than seeking economic "decoupling," the two
sides have welcomed the development of healthy economic relations, according to
top Chinese and U.S. economic officials.
China and the United States have agreed to enhance
communication, seek consensus, manage disputes, and avoid misunderstandings
that may lead to unintended escalation, noted China's Vice Finance Minister
Liao Min, citing talks between Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng and U.S.
Secretary of Treasury Janet Yellen before the summit.
"The China-U.S. economic relation takes roots in the two
countries' common interests in the economic field," Liao told media after
He and Yellen concluded several rounds of talks in San Francisco.
Chinese and U.S. commerce ministers also met on the sidelines
of the 30th APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting. It was the first ministerial-level
talk after a new communication mechanism was announced when U.S. Commerce
Secretary Gina Raimondo visited China in August.
While both governments agreed to step up exchanges in relevant
fields, the two sides had in-depth exchanges on national security issues
pertaining to the economic field.
It was very important to have such discussions, said Commerce
Minister Wang Wentao at the meeting, as overstretching and politicizing of the
concept of national security would impact regular trade and investment
activities.
CONSTRUCTIVE ENGAGEMENT
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International
Monetary Fund, has hailed the Xi-Biden summit as "a constructive
engagement."
"It sends a massively important signal that cooperation
can bring benefits to everyone," she said in her opening remarks at the
APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting Friday, expressing appreciation from a global
economic perspective.
The business circle echoed a similar sentiment. The American
Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai (AmCham Shanghai), in a statement after the
summit, also called the talks "a positive signal," noting that
"the two countries are committed to managing the world's most important
geopolitical relationship."
"A stable U.S.-China relationship is also crucial for
raising the confidence of American companies in China and will benefit the
American people," the AmCham Shanghai said.
At the sixth China International Import Expo in Shanghai
earlier this month, a total of 505 million U.S. dollars worth of deals were
signed by exhibitors participating in the American Food and Agriculture
Pavilion.
The pavilion, co-hosted by the United States Department of
Agriculture and AmCham Shanghai, marks the first U.S. government participation
in the expo in six years.
Robust agricultural trade mirrors the strong resilience of
China-U.S. trade, which has not been dampened by either trade disputes or the
pandemic in recent years. In 2022, total two-way trade hit a record high of
nearly 760 billion U.S. dollars, Chinese official data showed.
Apart from efforts to improve relations, China and the United
States, which together account for over one-third of the world economy, have
also agreed to join hands against common challenges related to economic growth,
financial stability and regulation, according to Vice Minister Liao.
The two countries will also cooperate on climate-related
economic issues and the debt issues of low-income and emerging economies,
strengthen the international financial structure, and push forward reform at
multilateral development banks to make them better, larger and more effective.
However, the Chinese side has also stressed the need to
maintain equality and mutual respect in future bilateral cooperation.
"China-U.S. economic and trade relations will truly
sustain stable development only when the legitimate concerns of both sides be
properly responded to," Liao said at the media briefing. (Xinhua)
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