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China attacks Donald Trump's trade investigation and pledges to 'resolutely safeguard' interests

Commerce Ministry says US President's order violates spirit of international business and reassures Chinese business 'all appropriate measures' will be taken to protect them

Joe McDonald
Tuesday 15 August 2017 09:56 BST
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Trump has told US trade officials to look into whether to launch a formal investigation into whether Beijing improperly requires foreign companies to hand over technology in exchange for market access
Trump has told US trade officials to look into whether to launch a formal investigation into whether Beijing improperly requires foreign companies to hand over technology in exchange for market access

China criticised President Donald Trump's order for a possible US trade investigation of Beijing's technology policies as a violation of global rules and said on Tuesday it will “resolutely safeguard” Chinese interests.

Trade groups for technology companies welcomed Trump's order on Monday but the Chinese Commerce Ministry said it violated the spirit of international trade and Washington's World Trade Organisation (WTO) commitments. The ministry said Beijing will take “all appropriate measures” if Chinese companies are hurt but gave no details.

Trump told US trade officials to look into whether to launch a formal investigation into whether Beijing improperly requires foreign companies to hand over technology in exchange for market access.

“If the US side disregards the fact it does not respect multilateral trade rules and takes action to damage the economic and trade relations between the two sides, then the Chinese side will never sit back and will take all appropriate measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese side,” said a Commerce Ministry statement.

Beijing requires automakers and other foreign companies in China to work through joint ventures, usually with state-owned partners. They often are required to give technology to partners that might become competitors.

More than 20 percent of 100 American companies that responded to a survey by the US-China Business Council, an industry group, said they were asked to transfer technology within the past three years as a condition of market access, according to Jake Parker, the group's vice president for China operations.

“We don't believe market access should be contingent on transferring technology,” said Parker. “It goes counter to China's WTO commitments.”

Foreign business groups complain companies are being squeezed out of promising Chinese markets or pressured to hand over technology for electric cars and other emerging industries.

Trump said in April he was setting aside trade disputes while Washington and Beijing worked together to persuade North Korea to give up nuclear weapons development. But American officials have resumed criticising Chinese policy in recent weeks.

“The White House is right to make clear all options are on the table,” said Robert D. Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, an industry group in Washington, in a statement.

The Commerce Ministry complained Trump's order was “strong unilateralism” that violated the spirit of multinational trade agreements.

“We believe the US side should strictly adhere to commitments and should not become the destroyer of multilateral rules,” said the statement.

Ahead of Monday's order, the Chinese foreign ministry appealed to Trump to avoid a “trade war.” A state newspaper, the China Daily, said an investigation could “intensify tensions,” especially over intellectual property.

Parker noted then-President Barack Obama ordered a similar investigation of Chinese policy on green technology in 2010. That ended in a negotiated settlement.

“It didn't lead to any unilateral sanctions against the Chinese,” said Parker. “Nor did it undermine the overall US-China trade relationship.”

Associated Press

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