China, US pledge to expand cooperation
"Due to the complicated, changeable nature of the current global economic and financial situation, both China and the US are facing many challenges.
“Holding the 4th SED under such circumstances will have special significance for us to enhance mutual strategic trust, deepen economic and trade cooperation, and respond jointly to challenges," visiting Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan said at the opening session of the meeting.
Wang listed three proposals for this round of dialogue. The first is to adhere to the topics of the meeting and expand consensus.
"Those topics reflect the major issues facing our two nations and basically cover the areas that have strategic and long-term impact for both our countries," Wang said.
New growth area
He stressed energy and environment as a new growth area for bilateral economic cooperation, where China and the US have many common interests and broad prospects.
Secondly, Wang said both countries needed to take each other's concerns into consideration and adopt a long-term perspective.
"China is the world's largest developing nation whereas the US is the largest developed nation, and our economies are mutually complementary," he noted.
Wang said it is important to avoid politicising the trade issue, which complicates the matter.
He pointed out that China has made solid progress in opening up its financial sector, in intellectual property rights protection, in product quality and food safety, in exchange rate system reform and in easing trade imbalance.
Owing to China's development level and the situation it faces, however, some problems will take time to solve, Wang admitted.
Need to increase trust
Both sides need to strengthen the SED mechanism and increase mutual strategic trust.
He emphasised that no matter what happens, both countries need to continue making a good use of the SED as an important platform of cooperation.
"The US-China economic relationship has become central to each nation's interest and to maintaining a stable, secure and prosperous global economic system," said U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.
"Through the ongoing, dynamic and respectful discussions of the SED, the relationship is growing in a positive direction.
“The SED has brought concrete progress on issues important to the US, the Chinese and the global economy faster than would have been possible otherwise," he added.
Building on progress
Paulson said the meeting will build on previous progress, "including landmark agreements on food, feed and product safety announced at our December SED meeting in Beijing."
"We will have a robust discussion on our economic relationship as we envision a future of sustainable economic growth," he said.
Wang and Paulson are co-chairing the meeting as special representatives of the state leaders of the two countries.
Participants at the two-day meeting include minister-level officials and other senior officials from the two governments.
The meeting features a series of sessions focusing on various topics.
The discussions will highlight five specific areas: financial and macro economic management, developing and protecting human capital, the benefits of trade and open markets, enhancing investment, and advancing joint opportunities for cooperation in energy and environment.
Article published courtesy of BuaNews