However, there is little expectation the fourth round of these high-level discussions will produce any major breakthroughs.
The discussions, given the weighty title of the "Strategic Economic Dialogue" when they were launched in 2006, could in fact be on life support, waiting to be put out of their misery by the next administration.
That is not the outcome envisioned by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who had big plans when he came up with the idea to gather a large contingent of President Bush's Cabinet with their counterparts from the Chinese government twice a year, alternating between the two countries.
The next meeting was scheduled for June 17-18 at the U.S. Naval Academy with Paulson giving a speech in Washington on Tuesday outlining the administration's hopes for the gathering. Considering the daunting challenges he faces, he may well use his talk to try to lower expectations.
The two sides will certainly have a lot of concerns about the global economy to keep them occupied: soaring oil prices, a severe credit crunch, worries about a recession in the United States.
Oil prices took their biggest single-day leap ever on Friday, jumping by nearly $11 to $138.54 per barrel, an increase that helped drag down the Dow Jones industrial average by nearly 400 points as investors grew more worried about the fate of the U.S. economy.
Those fears were heightened by a report earlier in the day that the U.S. unemployment rate jumped one-half percentage point in May to 5.5 percent, the biggest increase in 22 years.
The administration would like to ease worries about employment in the United States by getting China to allow its currency, the yuan, to rise more quickly in value against the dollar. U.S. manufacturers contend that the Chinese have gained unfair trade advantages by keeping the yuan undervalued, making Chinese goods cheaper for American consumers and American products more expensive in China.
The yuan has risen almost 20 percent against the dollar since the Chinese revamped their currency system in July 2005. Critics say that is less than half of the distance it needs to go to erase an unfair trade advantage they contend has contributed to the loss of more than 3 million U.S. manufacturing jobs since 2001.
As part of the effort to encourage a swifter revaluation of the yuan, Paulson has been urging the Chinese to open their financial system to foreign banks and investment houses including major U.S. institutions. They have the expertise, he maintains, to help guide the Chinese to a more modern financial system with a currency whose value is not controlled by the government but set by free-market trading.
However, Paulson is likely to meet strong resistance from the Chinese in this area, given the billions of dollars in losses suffered by U.S. financial giants in the credit crisis that erupted last August. The Chinese are likely to say they don't need the financial innovation that has brought so much grief to U.S. firms.
Likewise, a U.S. effort to get China to promote greater energy efficiency as a way of reducing strains on global supplies will also face strong resistance. In fact, the Chinese have been moving in the opposite direction, providing ever greater subsidies to keep energy prices low as global prices have surged.
"Over the past year, China has really fallen off the energy conservation wagon," said Nicholas Lardy, a China expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. "This will make it very difficult for China to cut energy use relative to their gross domestic product."