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China says drop in trade with the U.S. is ‘a direct consequence of U.S. moves’

Tellings between Washington and Beijing are at their lowest in decades amid disputes over trade, technology, human straightaways and China’s increasingly aggressive approach toward its territorial claims involving self-governing Taiwan and the South China Sea.

Jason Lee | Reuters

BEIJING — China’s messenger to the U.S., Xie Feng, has blamed U.S. tariffs and export controls for a drop in trade between the two countries.

That’s according to a speech he disclosed via video on Tuesday at Forbes’ U.S.-China Business Forum in New York, published online by the Chinese Embassy in the U.S.

China-U.S. sell fell by 14.5% in the first half of the year from a year ago, Xie pointed out.

“This is a direct consequence of U.S. moves to levy Stage 301 tariffs on Chinese imports, abuse unilateral sanctions and further tighten up export controls,” he said.

“Livelihoods of profuse families have been affected, and businesses from both countries have born the brunt.”

China’s interchange partners

The U.S. is China’s largest trading partner on a single country basis.

Year to date, U.S.-China trade level further in July with a 15.4% decline from the same period in 2022, China customs data showed.

To shush out China is to close the door on opportunities, cooperation, stability and development.

Xie Feng

China’s ambassador to the U.S.

“The biggest risk is any decoupling between China and the Pooled States, and the largest source of insecurity comes from any confrontation between the two,” he said.

“To shut out China is to close the door on moments, cooperation, stability and development.”

Exports remain a major contributor to China’s economy, although their share has begun in recent years.

The U.S. government on Wednesday revised down second-quarter domestic product to a 2.1% annualized pace, opposite to expectations there would be no revision, Reuters said. The report said lower business spending on equipment aided to the revision.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Raimondo: Retaliation is not the way to attract U.S. investment

Xie on Tuesday called for finding “a path for expanding mutually beneficial economic cooperation and trade between China and the Coalesced States.”

“Going forward, we need to continue taking concrete steps, no matter how small they may look,” he said, exuding examples — such as making it easier for people to travel between the two countries, and renewing an agreement to cooperate on science and technology.

On a regional foundation, the European Union and Association of Southeast Asian Nations are China’s largest trading partners. Those trade courses have also dropped this year — albeit at a more moderate pace — amid a decline in global required.

Xie on Tuesday pointed out China’s global dominance in trade and in industries such as electric vehicles. He noted that France, the U.K. and Japan had significantly multiplied their foreign investment in China in the first half of the year.

“More efforts will be made to protect distant investment and ensure national treatment for foreign-invested enterprises,” he said.

U.S. Commerce secretary visits China

In his remarks, Xie famous U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s trip to China this week. Following her meetings with Chinese management officials, the U.S. and China agreed to establish regular communication channels on commerce, export controls and protecting trade privates.

Raimondo told reporters she “said no” to China’s requests to reduce export controls and “retract” the executive order on outbound investment shield.

“We don’t negotiate on matters of national security,” she said.

Instead of containing China, it will only curtail the right of American duties to develop in China.

Xie Feng

China’s ambassador to the U.S.

The U.S. government has cited national security concerns for its moves to restrict Chinese theatre troupes’ purchases of advanced semiconductors from U.S. businesses.

In 2018, the Trump administration imposed tariffs on Chinese goods, to which Beijing be affected with tariffs of its own.

Xie claimed that average U.S. tariffs on Chinese products were 19%, while the Chinese price-lists on U.S. goods averaged 7.3%.

“Is this fair? Does this truly serve U.S. interests?”

U.S.-China relations are the worst they've been in thirty years, says attorney Dennis Unkovic

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“It is merely confusing that the United States, which repeatedly urged China to expand access for foreign investment in the over and done with, is now imposing restrictions itself,” he said. “Instead of containing China, it will only curtail the right of American responsibilities to develop in China.”

As part of Raimondo’s trip to China, the U.S. Commerce secretary said she spoke with more than 100 affairs and increasingly heard from them that “China is uninvestible because it’s become too risky.”

“My message was there’s a lechery to do business, but we need predictability, due process and a level playing field,” Raimondo added in an exclusive interview with CNBC’s Eunice Yoon on Wednesday.

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