U.S., China Execs Meet On Trade Disputes, Ukraine War
- By The Financial District

- Jan 22, 2023
- 2 min read
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sat down with her Chinese counterpart Wednesday in the highest-ranking contact between the two countries since their presidents agreed to look for ways to improve relations that have grown increasingly strained in recent years, Fatima Hussein reported for the Associated Press (AP).

Photo Insert: Yellen’s first face-to-face meeting with Vice Premier Liu He came as the US and Chinese economies grapple with differing but intertwined challenges on trade, technology, and more.
Yellen’s first face-to-face meeting with Vice Premier Liu He came as the US and Chinese economies grapple with differing but intertwined challenges on trade, technology, and more.
The Chinese economy is reopening after a COVID-19 resurgence killed tens of thousands of people and shuttered countless businesses. Yellen has been critical of China’s “unfair, non-market” practices and told Liu He about it right to his face. She also slammed China’s condoning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The US is slowly recovering from 40-year high price inflation and is on track to hit its statutory debt ceiling, setting up an expected political showdown between congressional Democrats and Republicans.
The debt issue is of keen interest to Asia, as China is the second-largest holder of US debt.
There is also the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which continues to hinder global economic growth — and has prompted the US and its allies to agree on an oil price cap on Russia in retaliation, putting China in a difficult spot as a friend and economic ally of Russia.
And high interest rates globally have increased pressure on debt-burdened nations that owe great sums to China.
“A wrong policy move or a reversal in the positive data and we could see the global economy head into a recession in 2023,” said Josh Lipsky, senior director of the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center.
“Both countries have a shared interest in avoiding that scenario.”
The World Bank (WB) reported last week that the global economy will come “ perilously close ” to a recession this year, led by weaker growth in all the world’s top economies — including the US and China. Low-income countries are expected to suffer from any economic downturns of superpowers, the report said.
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