G7 summit statement to target China's 'economic coercion' -source
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[May 13, 2023] By
Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) countries are
set to discuss concern about China's use of "economic coercion" in its
dealings abroad as part of their larger joint statement next week,
according to a U.S. official familiar with the discussions.
The statement, a likely component of the overall communique that will be
released by leaders during the May 19-21 summit in Hiroshima, Japan, is
expected to be paired with a broader written proposal on how the seven
advanced economies will work together to counter "economic coercion"
from any country.
The main G7 statement is set to include "a section specific to China"
with a list of concerns that include "economic coercion and other
behavior that we have seen specifically from the [People's Republic of
China]," the official said on Friday.
A separate "economic security statement will speak more to tools" used
to counter coercive efforts from any countries responsible, including
planning and coordination, the person said. In each case, the statements
are to expected go further than prior statements by the G7.
U.S. President Joe Biden has made China a focus of his foreign policy,
working to keep the tense and competitive relationship from veering into
one of open conflict, including over self-ruled Taiwan.
The G7, which also includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy and the
United Kingdom, is closely tied economically to China, the world's
biggest exporter and a key market for many of the seven countries'
companies.
Last month, China called a statement by the G7 foreign ministers that
touched on similar topics "full of arrogance, prejudice against China,"
and lodged complaints with this year's G7 host, Japan.
Under Biden's predecessor, President Donald Trump, G7 statements often
offered only a cursory mention of issues involving China. The Biden
administration has pushed for more direct statements.
The joint statement issued by all the G7 leaders every year is intended
to signal that the powerful countries are aligned on a range of
political and economic issues.
G7 members will also hold out the prospect of further cooperation with
China on areas like climate.
"We're not for decoupling the U.S. and Chinese economy, we are for
de-risking, we are for diversifying," said the U.S. official. "That
principle is very unifying."
Negotiations over the precise language of the leaders' joint
declarations are still subject to diplomacy and adjustment before they
are released during summit.
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Fireworks explode to welcome the G7
Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors’ Meeting and to express
the unity and solidarity for peace, and condolence to the victims of
wars and disasters all over the world, near the meeting venue in
Niigata, Japan, May 12, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato
CHINA TESTS G7 ALLIANCE
The G7 meeting will be a test of how much the members, all rich
democracies, can agree on a common approach to China, the world's
second largest economy.
The China terms have been a major subject of the talks currently
underway by G7 finance leaders in Niigata, Japan, where they have
focused on reducing "over-reliance" of their countries' supply
chains on Chinese manufacturing, including by partnering with low-
and middle-income countries.
"The U.S. wants to get something hard on paper down in terms of
agreement and the other countries are interested, but they're not as
interested in putting specifics down on paper on these various
instruments and economic statecraft tools," said Josh Lipsky, senior
director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center.
In particular, some G7 members are skeptical about signing on to
controls on outbound investment in China.
The policies are being drafted partly to help deny China's military
access to tools it could use to gain technological superiority, and
many in the Biden administration see them as complementary to export
controls restricting access to some semiconductors that have the
same goal.
"Of course, each member of the G7 is to some extent going to carve
their own path on China and yet there are also a set of kind of
principles that unite the G7 in a common approach to China," said
the U.S. official.
Traveling for the G7 finance meeting in Japan, U.S. Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday that China had clearly used
economic coercion with Australia and Lithuania.
Hanging over the meeting was a lack of progress in resolving the
U.S. debt ceiling stalemate. A scheduled meeting on Friday between
Biden and top lawmakers was postponed until early next week as
Biden's Democrats and Republicans seek a compromise to avoid a
catastrophic default.
U.S. officials, nonetheless, expect the president to attend the
two-day summit as planned, followed by trips to Papua New Guinea and
Australia also aimed at shoring up Washington's approach to the
China-dominated Asia-Pacific region.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Edited by Heather Timmons and Leslie
Adler)
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