Constructive Sino-US talks encouraged

BEIJING: Washington should show greater sincerity in engaging with Beijing and maintain the stability of global industrial and supply chains, analysts said, as China and the United States agreed to resume economic and trade consultations soon.

They made the remarks after Vice-Premier He Lifeng, who is also China’s lead person for China-US economic and trade affairs, held a video call on Saturday with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Both sides agreed to hold a fresh round of talks as soon as possible.

Despite the Sino-US trade talks held in mid-September in Madrid, Spain, the US government introduced a series of new restrictions targeting China, such as adding more Chinese entities to various exclusion lists and maintaining Section 301 tariffs on key Chinese industries, further increasing the friction between the world’s two largest economies.

Zhou Mi, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, called the decision to resume economic and trade consultations a positive step, but urged the US to show “genuine sincerity and refrain from moves that could erode trust or hinder constructive dialogue”.

“Failure to do so will deepen mistrust and escalate tensions,” he said.
Huang Rengang, vice-chairman of the China Society for World Trade Organization Studies, said that Washington’s repeated threats to impose additional tariffs to pressure Beijing have time and again proved to be the wrong approach in handling China-US relations.

Wang Wei, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of American Studies in Beijing, said that China has ample means to counter actions harming its interests, and it can defend its legitimate rights as well as global fairness.

China’s continuous improvement of its export control system on rare earths is a legitimate act within the scope of national sovereignty, Wang added.

According to the “2025 Report on WTO Compliance of the United States” released last week by China’s Ministry of Commerce, US trade practices have violated World Trade Organization rules, including those on tariffs and nontariff barriers, trade remedies, industrial and agricultural subsidies, technical regulations, services, export controls and sanctions, investment reviews and discriminatory arrangements in international cooperation.

Chen Wenling, former chief economist at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, noted that the complex interdependence between China and the US has created a commercial ecosystem so deeply integrated that the two countries have become inseparable in many critical sectors.

Supply chains, technological innovation and consumer markets have become so intertwined that confrontation would come at a cost neither country could easily bear, she said. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item