U.S. envoy to China expects 'zero COVID' policy to persist into 2023
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[June 17, 2022]
By Michael Martina
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States'
ambassador to China, Nicholas Burns, said on Thursday he expects
Beijing's "zero COVID" policy to persist into early 2023, and that U.S.
businesses were reluctant to invest in the country until restrictions
ease.
The re-emergence of infections in China's capital Beijing has raised new
concerns about the outlook for the world's second largest economy, which
had recently emerged from a long lockdown that shook global supply
chains in its most populous city and commercial hub, Shanghai.
"I think we're going to have to live with this for a long time," Burns
told an online Brookings Institution event.
"My own assumption is that we'll see the continuation of 'zero COVID'
probably into the beginning months of 2023. That's what the Chinese
government is signaling," Burns said, referring to China's policy of
seeking to stamp out each cluster of new cases, often with strict
lockdowns and mass testing.
"I think there's a hesitancy to invest in future obligations until they
can see the end of this," Burns said of U.S. companies.
Analysts say the Chinese government's official GDP growth target of
around 5.5% for this year will be hard to achieve without doing away
with the strategy.
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Former ambassador to NATO Nicholas Burns gives his opening statement
during the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on his
nomination to be the U.S. Ambassador to China, on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S. October 20, 2021. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
"We put the speech on Weibo, and
WeChat. And it was censored in about two and a half hours. Just
taken away," Burns said, adding that the Embassy reposted it days
later and it was again removed.
Burns also said some assessments within China's government that the
United States is in decline and is therefore becoming more
aggressive toward China was not accurate and an "excuse".
"I think what's changed is the newly aggressive behavior of the
Chinese government ... over the last five to 10 years. And you've
seen a counter reaction to that," he said.
(Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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