U.S. presses China to reduce barriers for
foreign business
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[June 07, 2016]
By David Lawder
BEIJING (Reuters) - Senior U.S. officials
pressed China again on Tuesday to reduce barriers for foreign
businesses, saying concerns have grown due to a more complex regulatory
environment.
Foreign business confidence has been impacted by regulatory and
protectionist worries, following a series of government
investigations targeting foreign companies and the roll-out of a
national security law limiting the use of overseas technology.
U.S. business groups have also complained about new Chinese
regulations they say favour local firms and make it more difficult
to operate in China, as well as other laws related to national
security.
"Concerns about the business climate have grown in recent years,
with foreign businesses confronting a more complex regulatory
environment and questioning whether they are welcome in China," U.S.
Treasury Secretary Jack Lew told Chinese and American businesses and
officials.
"Our two governments have a responsibility to foster conditions that
facilitate continued and increased investment, trade, and commercial
cooperation," Lew said, on the second day of high level talks
between the two countries in Beijing.
 "This means enacting policies that encourage healthy competition,
ensuring predictability and transparency in the policy-making and
regulatory process, protecting intellectual property rights, and
removing discriminatory investment barriers. These policies are
vital as China seeks to build on its economic progress in recent
decades."
Secretary of State John Kerry, speaking at the same event, said that
as the two economies become more intertwined in shared prosperity,
they have more "skin in the game" to keep their economic
relationship on an even keel.
"So we have to work on intellectual property. We have to work on
transparency and accountability, we have to work on certainty and
the rules of the road," Kerry said, adding that certainty was
critical for business.
Kerry expressed concern about China's new law on foreign
non-governmental organisations, which he said may have a negative
impact on non-profit health care groups that want to do business in
China.
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Treasury Secretary Jack Lew shakes hands with China's Vice Premier
Wang Yang before the Economic Dialogue of the 8th round of
U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogues in Beijing June 6, 2016.
REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
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Barriers to investment in China should removed as quickly as
possible, he added.
China says it is committed to welcoming foreign companies to the
country, the world's second largest economy.
State Councillor Yang Jiechi, China's top diplomat who outranks the
foreign minister, said China was working to open its markets, and
pointed to talks over a bilateral investment treaty as an example of
this.
"We are comprehensively deepening reform, expanding, opening up, and
our economy is expected to maintain long term medium-high growth
rates."
Speaking later to reporters, Yang also defended the NGO law.
"As China carries out reform and opening, the law must be followed.
Foreign NGOs' activities in China will not face any obstruction."
(Additional reporting by Michael Martina; Writing by John Ruwitch
and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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