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Yellen to meet Chinese official in bid to ease tensions by AFP Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Jan 16, 2023 US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will meet with a top Chinese official on Wednesday to discuss the global economy and seek to deepen communications between their countries, a Treasury official said Monday. Yellen's meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, to take place in Zurich, will be their first in-person encounter following three virtual meetings, the official said. US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping had vowed during a November meeting in Bali, Indonesia to improve communications after years of sharp tensions over trade, human rights, Taiwan and other issues. Yellen and Liu will "exchange views on macroeconomic developments and other economic issues as well as deepen communication" between their countries, the Treasury official said. In Bali, Biden and Xi had pledged "to continue responsibly managing the competition between our two countries and to explore potential areas of cooperation," the State Department said in November. Weeks later, a first high-level US delegation -- led by Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrink and the National Security Council director for China and Taiwan, Laura Rosenberger -- traveled to China for follow-up talks. That delegation was also there to prepare a visit early this year by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, to be the first by the top US diplomat in four years. The United States and China -- the two largest economies in the world -- spend more than any other nations on their militaries and are locked in fierce strategic competition. In their Bali meeting, the two leaders discussed contentious issues, including Taiwan's future, US restrictions on Chinese high-tech imports and China's moves to expand its global influence. Long-simmering disputes between the two countries flared during the Donald Trump presidency, and have continued -- if less acutely -- under President Biden. Both Biden and Xi have said they want to reduce tensions. Biden left his Bali meeting with Xi proclaiming that there need not be a new Cold War, while Xi told the American president that the two countries "share more, not less, common interests."
China economy grows 3% in 2022: official data Beijing had set itself a target of 5.5 percent, a rate already much lower than the performance of 2021, when GDP increased by more than eight percent. In the fourth quarter, China's economy grew 2.9 percent year-on-year, compared with 3.9 percent in the third quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics said (NBS). The world's second-largest economy faced historic headwinds as 2022 drew to a close, with exports plunging last month due to a drop in global demand and rigid health restrictions that hammered economic activity. Tuesday's figures represent China's worst growth figures since a 1.6 contraction in 1976 -- the year Mao Zedong died -- and excluding 2020, after the coronavirus emerged in Wuhan in late 2019. According to Tuesday's data, China's industrial output rose 1.3 percent in December from a year ago, while retail sales contracted 1.8 percent. Fixed-asset investment gained 5.1 percent last year, and the urban jobless rate fell to 5.5 percent last month from 5.7 percent in November. "The good news is that there are now signs of stabilization, as policy support doled out towards the end of 2022 is showing up in the relative resilience of infrastructure investment and credit growth," Louise Loo, Senior Economist at Oxford Economics, said in a note. - 'Zero-Covid' scrapped - China's economic woes last year sent reverberations across a global supply chain already struggling with waning demand. Strict lockdowns, quarantines and compulsory mass testing prompted the abrupt closures of manufacturing facilities and businesses in major hubs -- including Zhengzhou, home of the world's biggest iPhone factory. Beijing abruptly loosened pandemic restrictions in December in the wake of some of the biggest protests in years. The World Bank has forecast China's GDP will rebound to 4.3 percent for 2023 -- still below expectations. And the country is continuing to battle a surge in Covid cases that has overwhelmed its hospitals and medical staff. Problems in the property industry are also still weighing on growth. This sector, which along with construction accounts for more than a quarter of China's GDP, has been hit hard since Beijing started cracking down on excessive borrowing and rampant speculation in 2020. The regulatory tightening marked the beginning of financial worries for Evergrande, the former Chinese number one in real estate that is now strangled by huge debt. Real estate sales have since fallen in many cities and many developers are struggling to survive. But the government appears to be taking a more conciliatory approach to reviving this key sector. Measures to promote "stable and healthy" development were announced in November, including credit support for indebted developers and assistance for deferred-payment loans for homebuyers.
China-Myanmar border towns eye revival after Covid trauma Ruili, China (AFP) Jan 15, 2023 At a checkpoint on China's southern frontier with Myanmar, shuttered stores advertising the region's famed jade jewellery appear abandoned, driven out of business by a pandemic-induced closure of the border. The city of Ruili is slowly creaking back to life as China ditches its zero-tolerance Covid strategy after years of strict lockdowns and other gruelling restrictions. An absence of cross-border travel has haunted the trade-dependent city since April 2020, when the flow of goods and people fr ... read more
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