CHINA's new ambassador to the United States, Qin Gang, has called for stable and constructive commercial ties between the world's two biggest economies, even as they struggle to resolve political and trade differences, a trade group said.
The envoy made the comments in an online meeting with the chief executives of major US companies who serve on the board of the US-China Business Council, the group said in a statement, reports Reuters.
'The ambassador's message to the CEOs was that the commercial relationship must thrive and grow while we work harder to resolve disagreements,' said Craig Allen, president of the nonprofit group of 200 US companies that work with China.
The meeting came days after US President Joe Biden and chinese President Xi Jinping agreed in a telephone call on the need to ensure that competition between their nations did not veer into conflict.
Mr Allen said the overall US-Chinese relationship was 'in a troubled place' at the moment, but Mr Qin told the group their commercial ties remained strong.
Mr Allen attended the meeting and has met the ambassador several times since he arrived at his new post in August.
US companies are growing frustrated by the slow pace of the Biden administration's review of China trade policies, and the continuation of tariffs on hundreds of billions of goods traded between the two countries.
The Phase 1 interim trade deal, which expires at the end of the year, called for China to boost purchases of US exports by US$200 billion over two years, but Beijing is far behind that target, partly because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
SeaNews Turkey
The envoy made the comments in an online meeting with the chief executives of major US companies who serve on the board of the US-China Business Council, the group said in a statement, reports Reuters.
'The ambassador's message to the CEOs was that the commercial relationship must thrive and grow while we work harder to resolve disagreements,' said Craig Allen, president of the nonprofit group of 200 US companies that work with China.
The meeting came days after US President Joe Biden and chinese President Xi Jinping agreed in a telephone call on the need to ensure that competition between their nations did not veer into conflict.
Mr Allen said the overall US-Chinese relationship was 'in a troubled place' at the moment, but Mr Qin told the group their commercial ties remained strong.
Mr Allen attended the meeting and has met the ambassador several times since he arrived at his new post in August.
US companies are growing frustrated by the slow pace of the Biden administration's review of China trade policies, and the continuation of tariffs on hundreds of billions of goods traded between the two countries.
The Phase 1 interim trade deal, which expires at the end of the year, called for China to boost purchases of US exports by US$200 billion over two years, but Beijing is far behind that target, partly because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
SeaNews Turkey