U.S. Trade Chief Says Time to Ditch ‘Old Playbook’ on China

Published 30/03/2022, 12:10
© Bloomberg. Katherine Tai, U.S. trade representative, speaks while visiting the Fearless digital services firm on the sidelines of the Dialogue on the Future of Atlantic Trade event in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., on Tuesday, March 22, 2022. The economic dialogue led by high-level U.S. and U.K. officials this week is raising business group optimism for free-trade talks, even as the Biden administration faces political constraints from labor supporters.

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. trade chief Katherine Tai said it was time to forget about changing China’s behavior and instead take a more defensive posture toward the world’s second-biggest economy.

In remarks distributed before she testifies before a congressional committee Wednesday, Tai said talks last year with China on a so-called phase one trade agreement reached under President Donald Trump failed to produce results. 

“The United States has repeatedly sought and obtained commitments from China, only to find that follow-through or real change remains elusive,” Tai said in written testimony for the House Ways and Means Committee. 

“While we continue to keep the door open to conversations with China, including on its phase one commitments, we also need to acknowledge the agreement’s limitations, and turn the page on the old playbook with China, which focused on changing its behavior,” she added. 

Instead, Tai said the U.S. strategy must defend “our values and economic interests from the negative impacts of the PRC’s unfair economic policies and practices.”

The comments show the world’s biggest economies remain far apart on any discussions to improve trade ties after relations plummeted to new depths in the wake of Covid-19’s global spread in early 2020. Since then, both countries have put up new barriers for businesses on national security grounds, as concerns grow among some exporting countries like Singapore about a broader push toward decoupling. 

Tai noted the U.S.’s efforts to become more competitive in strategic industries and work with American allies to make supply chains more resilient. She also said her agency would do more to eliminate the use of forced labor, noting a new law designed to curb the imports of goods from China’s far west Xinjiang region over alleged genocide against ethnic Uyghur Muslims and other minority groups.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said Wednesday at a regular press briefing in Beijing that his nation was “a staunch advocate for trade facilitation and liberalization,” and urged the U.S. to “stop resorting to hegemonism and unilateral bullying.” “Such practices contravene market principles and international trade rules, damage other countries’ interests, and undermine the supply and industrial chain stability,” he said. “It is to no one’s benefit.” 

In early 2020, the U.S. and China agreed to the so-called phase one deal, with the U.S. reducing some tariffs in exchange for Beijing pledging to address intellectual property theft and buy $200 billion in energy, farm and manufactured goods along with services through last December. Tai made no mention of a review of the first group of tariffs on more than $300 billion in Chinese imports needed to prevent their expiration. 

China has rejected U.S. criticism that it has failed to live up to the purchases, arguing it had done its best to implement the agreement despite the pandemic, global economic recession and supply chain disruptions. Beijing has repeatedly called on the U.S. to take steps to improve relations, including canceling punitive tariffs, lifting all sanctions, revoking visa bans and ending export restrictions of high-tech items.

(Updates with Chinese Foreign Ministry comment in the seventh paragraph.)

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. Katherine Tai, U.S. trade representative, speaks while visiting the Fearless digital services firm on the sidelines of the Dialogue on the Future of Atlantic Trade event in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., on Tuesday, March 22, 2022. The economic dialogue led by high-level U.S. and U.K. officials this week is raising business group optimism for free-trade talks, even as the Biden administration faces political constraints from labor supporters.

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