Meetings between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi
Jinping in Beijing this week will focus on addressing trade imbalances
between the two countries, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said on
Wednesday.
Data on Wednesday showed China’s exports to the U.S. rose 8.3 percent in October on the year, while imports grew 4.3 percent. That led to a trade surplus of $26.62 billion with the U.S. last month, down from September’s record $28.08 billion, but higher than recent trends.
The ceremony was
a prelude to a “more important” signing ceremony set for Thursday, he
added. Among the companies expected to sign deals on Thursday are
Qualcomm, Boeing and Goldman Sachs.
Chinese commerce minister Zhong Shan also attended the event in the Great Hall of the People next to Tiananmen Square.
Ross was speaking at a signing ceremony in the Chinese capital for commercial deals worth about $9 billion on Trump’s visit.
Data on Wednesday showed China’s exports to the U.S. rose 8.3 percent in October on the year, while imports grew 4.3 percent. That led to a trade surplus of $26.62 billion with the U.S. last month, down from September’s record $28.08 billion, but higher than recent trends.
Deals signed on Wednesday included a pledge by Chinese ecommerce company JD.com (JD.O)
to buy more than $2 billion of food products from the U.S. over three
years and a pact for Reignwood International to buy additional
helicopters from U.S. firm Bell Helicopter.
While
19 deals were signed on Wednesday, some in the U.S. business community
have expressed worry that contract wins could come at the expense of
resolving long-standing complaints over market access restrictions in
China.
At the ceremony, China’s vice premier
Wang Yang said deals signed between China and U.S. firms would
“contribute to the stabilization of the general and overall economic
relations between the two countries”.
Chinese commerce minister Zhong Shan also attended the event in the Great Hall of the People next to Tiananmen Square.

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