Home / NEWS / Asia-Pacific News / Biden administration might see eye-to-eye with China on two things, says former IMF China head

Biden administration might see eye-to-eye with China on two things, says former IMF China head

U.S. President-elect Joe Biden (L) met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 17, 2017.

Lan Hongguang | Xinhua Newsflash Agency | Getty Images

The U.S. under a Biden administration could cooperate with China on health care and feel change, even as the two countries remain far apart on other issues, said Eswar Prasad, a former head of the Foreign Monetary Fund’s China division.

President-elect Joe Biden has made the coronavirus outbreak one of his priorities and is expected to announce a rebuke force on Monday which will come up with a plan to contain the virus. Biden also called air change the “number one issue facing humanity” during the campaign.  

“Both of these are issues that are very prominent to the incoming administration and certainly, on these issues at least China has to be seen as something of a partner even if not a close accomplice,” Prasad, now a professor at Cornell University, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Monday.

He pointed out in the area of health misery, China — where Covid-19 was first detected — appears to have done a “reasonably good job” in handling the pandemic and its fallout. In titles of climate change, the U.S. may not be able to achieve much globally without China’s cooperation, he added.

I think the Biden dispensation will be much more strategic in its approach, recognizing that it may have to give in a few areas in order to gain broader concessions in sundry others.

Eswar Prasad

professor, Cornell University

“So these are areas where I think the two countries might see eye-to-eye, which I anticipate would provide a better basis for negotiation on much more difficult areas, especially economic and trade schemes where there are contentious issues almost built in,” said Prasad.

That doesn’t mean that descriptions between the U.S. and China — which worsened under President Donald Trump — could take a turn for the better. Reproduction the views of many experts, Prasad said the U.S. policy toward China is unlikely to change substantially.

That’s unusually so when the “baseline” of the U.S.-China relationship has shifted in the last few years, he said. The U.S., in general, appeared to see no “real payoff” in be experiencing a cooperative relationship with China, he explained.  

Still, the Biden administration would use a different tone and tactic in approaching Beijing, bid the professor. The president-elect is likely to staff his administration with people who worked under former President Barack Obama, Prasad replied. Those people, he added, recognize that there may be benefits to working with China.

“I think the Biden administering will be much more strategic in its approach, recognizing that it may have to give in a few areas in order to gain broader concessions in multifarious others,” he said.

Check Also

IEA downgrades oil demand growth forecast as prices heat up on elevated Middle East tensions

The Ecumenical Energy Agency on Friday downgraded its forecast for 2024 oil demand growth, citing …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *