China will never bow to any extreme pressure
By Zhong Sheng, People’s Daily
The
erratic weather in Washington seems to tell what happens between the world’s
two largest economies. In a highly hard and sensitive atmosphere, China and the
US kicked off their 11th round of high-level trade talks on May 9.
Both
sides have made substantial progress in better protection of intellectual
property rights, expanded market access, balance of bilateral trade, and many
other fields, but diverged on some agendas related to China’s core concerns.
After
the US beat a battle drum by announcing a new round of tariff hikes on Chinese
imports, China also declared its decision to take necessary countermeasures.
The past
rounds of trade negotiations between China and the US were like pieces of
symphonic music which contained not only vague but discernable main melody, but
also off-key reverberant chords from time to time.
Does it
imply that a trade dialogue cannot get rid of noisy, unpredictable, and cloudy
script? A review to the past negotiations on other agendas finds that all the
stories were full of trials and hardships that needed to be sailed through.
China
spent 15 years on the talks before it joined the World Trade Organization
(WTO), while the complex Uruguay Round of global trade talks cost nearly 8
years in gaming, not to mention the Doha Round negotiations that even failed to
really set out after its start in 2001.
The
whole world is now watching whether China and the US can step out of the
predicament soon as their trade talks are now rightly trapped in a same script.
China
has been pushing forward the bilateral talks with a high sense of
responsibility and maximized sincerity, but it will never yield to the extreme
pressure from the US, or compromise on matters of principle.
China
has made it clear to call for the elimination of all additional tariffs to
resume normal bilateral trade, to work out reasonable and realistic figures for
trade procurement, and ensure a balanced text to the deal. The text must be
expressed in terms that are acceptable to the Chinese people and by no means
undermine national sovereignty and dignity.
Washington
ignited the trade frictions at an excuse of seeking “fair trade”, but it’s
absurd that in the whole talks, it turned a blind eye to the logic that a fair
trade should be bi-directional, since equality is always embedded on win-win
results.
Both
China and the US have their own core concerns, and there is no way to alienate
the core interests.
Back to
the days when China and the US toasted for their agreement on the former’s
membership of the WTO after 13 years of negotiations, they repeatedly
underlined the importance of the golden rule resulting in the success--a
win-win solution.
Testified
by history, the principled elements that can lead the talks to success are
proven to be mutual benefits, win-win results, mutual understanding and mutual
accommodation, seeking common ground while reserving difference, and treating
each other with sincerity.
But it’s
regrettable that the US failed to pick the golden key of win-win solution and
walk out of the self-designed cage of so-called “fair trade”. If it insists on
the unilateral extreme pressure, both sides will miss the best timing to
resolve the problem.
Maybe
Washington never chews over several questions: what era the whole world is in?
What kind of growth momentum China is really going through? How many market
opportunities the US will lose from the aggressive trade frictions?
The US wielded
the tariff stick once again because of its misjudgments on China’s
strength, capability and willpower. By further escalating the trade tensions,
does it really want to compel its trade ties with China to a crossroad of
breakdown?
Washington’s
reckless leap in the dark has been poured with strong opposition and
condemnation from domestic society. The American
Soybean Association, American Apparel & Footwear Association, the US
Consumer Technology Association, the National Retail Federation and other walks
of life warned that it would roil the markets, hurt the interests of consumers,
workers, farmers and companies, and severely jeopardize US economy.
Blames
on Washington’s risky and impetuous decision also overwhelmed in the
international community.
China
firmly opposes the additional tariffs from the US, and has already made
preparations to cope with all possible results. Its sensible and calm gesture
has gained worldwide attention, through which the international community could
find China’s enough strength to address economic challenges.
Marching
forward on a road to high-quality development, Chinese economy has accumulated
high resilience and strong vitality.
With a
trading network encompassing partners worldwide, China is accelerating its
transformation from a trader of quantity to a trader of quality by cementing
its traditional advantages, finding new drivers, and exploring new spaces. The
trade frictions with the US cannot stop China’s steps at all.
Of
course, the window for the hope of better bilateral economic and trade ties has
not closed, and is impossible to shut down. The delegations of both sides have
agreed to continue their consultation and communication, which also meets the
appeals of the public.
The
governors of the US states hope to develop trade and investment ties with China
as always, disclosed veteran US diplomat Charles W. Freeman, calling on an eye
on the positive views the Americans hold on Chinese public.
What’s
past is prologue. The progress and setbacks the Chinese and US teams witnessed
over the past year also provide a clue for the two countries when developing
their future relationship.
Facing
the difficulties, Chinese people have a saying going as “we must not let our
vision be blocked by floating clouds”, while the US people have a proverb
saying “every cloud has a silver lining”. When coming to the big picture of
China-US ties, the public are still yearning for the light of hope amidst the
cloud.
Cooperation
is the only right choice for both sides. Facts since China and the US
established diplomatic relations 40 years ago illustrated that bilateral
cooperation meets the demands of big trends, as a sound bilateral relationship
can benefit not only China and the US, but also the whole world.
Economic
and trade relationship is the ballast stone and propeller of the overall
bilateral ties, which is a fact that cannot be overturned by a few regress and
setbacks. The ongoing negotiations shoulder a historic mission to build a new
balanced, inclusive and win-win order of bilateral economic and trade
relations.
In order
to ensure the welfare of the two peoples and the sustainable growth of both
countries, China and the US are obliged to take the talks seriously, firmly
manage and control differences on a basis of mutual respect, equal-footed
treatment and mutual benefit, and find a solution acceptable to each other,
rather than being kidnapped by temporary entanglement.
The US,
in particular, should follow the trend of big picture and work together with
China to meet each other halfway, so as to resolve the challenges through
equal-footed consultations and create a bright future through win-win
cooperation.
(Zhong
Sheng, a homonym in Chinese for “voice of China”, is a pen name often used by
People’s Daily to express its views on foreign policy.)
China will never bow to any extreme pressure
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