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China's Vice President Urges Deeper U.S. Cooperation After Talks

Mid-level talks this week between the two countries in Beijing ending on an optimistic note.

China's Vice President Urges Deeper U.S. Cooperation After Talks
Wang Qishan, China’s vice president, speaks during the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore. (Photographer: Justin Chin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- China’s vice president said cooperation is the best choice for Beijing and Washington while reiterating his nation would stay committed to its own path, a day after mid-level trade talks ended on a positive note.

“As Chinese-U.S. relations stand at a new starting line, it must stay committed to our original aspiration and focus on coordination, cooperation and stability,” Wang Qishan said at a reception in Beijing on Thursday to commemorate the 40th anniversary of China and the U.S. establishing diplomatic ties. "We must adapt to the new reality, keep looking for and expanding our common interests, deepening and promoting practical cooperation."

China's Vice President Urges Deeper U.S. Cooperation After Talks

China and the U.S. are trying to resolve an unprecedented trade standoff, with mid-level talks this week in Beijing ending on an optimistic note -- though few details have emerged. Global stocks have rallied on fresh hope of a breakthrough in the negotiations. The next steps include a possible meeting between Wang and U.S. President Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum later this month.

Wang -- a long-time ally of President Xi Jinping -- is leading China’s team to the annual forum in Davos, Switzerland, and will deliver a keynote address there. The talk with Trump would take place on the sidelines of the meeting, the South China Morning Post reported.

Today’s event was attended by members of the U.S. diplomatic and business community in China, including U.S. Ambassador Terry Branstad and head of the American Chamber of Commerce Tim Stratford. Former U.S. President Richard Nixon’s grandson Christopher Nixon Cox and Chinese diplomat Fu Ying were also at the lunch reception.

In November, Wang did little to assuage fears that China and the U.S. are headed for a confrontation that could disrupt the global order. Beijing remained ready to discuss solutions to the trade conflict, he told Bloomberg’s New Economy Forum in November. But he warned that China wouldn’t again be “bullied and oppressed by imperialist powers.”

“Regardless of how the international landscape changes, China will unswervingly follow its own path, run its own affairs steadfastly and enable its people to have a better life," Wang said on Thursday.

Lengthy Negotiations

China has made a number of concessions since Xi and Trump agreed to a 90-day truce in Argentina on Dec. 1, including slashing import tariffs on more than 700 products. Still, negotiations have been stuck over U.S. demands for deep structural reforms including stopping forced technology transfers, enforcing intellectual property rights and ending state subsidies for strategic industries.

The Trump administration is pushing for a way to make sure China delivers on its commitments in any trade deal. China said this week’s meetings were “extensive, in-depth and detailed,” and laid the foundation for a resolution of the conflict.

--With assistance from James Mayger.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Dandan Li in Beijing at dli395@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Sharon Chen, Karen Leigh

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg