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At the meetings, China is expected to raise concerns about the standoff between the administration and Congress on raising the government's $14.3 trillion borrowing limit. Geithner has told Congress that the U.S. could default on its debt if the limit isn't raised by Aug. 2. "The Chinese are concerned about this issue because they hold a lot of U.S. debt," said Prasad. "The Chinese are astounded that the U.S. government would let the debate get to the stage where there is even a remote possibility of a default." On other issues, U.S. officials say they want to see more progress on economic commitments made when Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Obama in January. Those include closer monitoring of Chinese government purchases of software, a move intended to boost Beijing's buying of legal U.S. software and reduce its use of pirated software. American companies say such theft is costing them billions in lost sales. The Chinese also pledged to revamp a policy that limits the ability of U.S. companies to compete for Chinese government projects unless the products are designed in China. American businesses regard this as an effort to force them to turn over their technology to China or be locked out of its government market. American businesses say they've seen little progress by China to honor the commitments made during Hu's visit. On foreign policy, officials said Clinton will renew efforts to gain China's support in confronting nuclear threats from North Korea and Iran, and she will raise the issue of human rights. The Chinese have agreed to have some top military officers meet with their U.S. counterparts. That's a first for these talks and a development seen as an effort to ease tensions. Chinese officials said Friday they were prepared to discuss human rights. China recently undertook the biggest security crackdown in years, apparently prompted by the communist leadership's fear of Middle East-inspired unrest migrating to China. Though analysts foresee no significant breakthroughs in this week's talks, Prasad said that might reflect a maturing relationship between the two nations. "The focus has shifted to making methodical if slow progress rather than ... arriving at dramatic breakthroughs," he said. ___ Online: Background on the history of the talks:
http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Pages/china.aspx
[Associated
Press;
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