Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2007
BEIJING, March 12 (Xinhua) -- China resolutely
opposes a tariff increase of 27.5 percent on Chinese goods, which was proposed
by some U.S. lawmakers, Commerce Minister Bo Xilai said here Monday, adding such
an increase will be destructive to healthy bilateral trade.
"If implemented, such a policy is
more than protectionism and becomes hegemonism," the minister said at a press
conference on the sidelines of the parliament's annual session.
China's trade surplus with the United States exceeded
140 billion U.S. dollars last year, sparking strong response from the U.S.
Congress and media.
Some U.S. lawmakers proposed a 27.5 percent increase
in tariff on all Chinese goods and suggested the most-favored-nation treatment
for China be revoked, unless China makes major reforms and changes on foreign
exchange policies.
However, the Chinese commerce minister said the
proposals are in breach of the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements, while
in bilateral trade "China has the surplus while the United States has the
profits."
"The U.S. traders are wise and we have no grounds for
suspicion. They will not do business with China if they can not make profits,"
Bo said.
He said the development of Sino-U.S. trade is healthy
and traders from both sides have reached a mutual beneficial and win-win
relationship.
The minister said U.S. trade deficit with China
partly resulted from a transfer of its deficit with Japan and the Republic of
Korea amid the development of processing trade in China.
Global business activities have kept growing after
China's entry into the WTO, while trade frictions between China and some of its
trade partners, especially Europe and the United States, are also on the rise,
the minister noted.
China prefers to resort to consultations for the
settlement of trade frictions with its trade partners, he said.
China's trade surplus reached 177.47 billion U.S.
dollars in 2006, with foreign trade totaling 1.76 trillion dollars, up 23.8
percent year-on-year.
China will strive to reduce its "excessively large"
trade surplus to ensure the sustained development of both domestic economy and
foreign trade this year, said Premier Wen Jiabao on March 5 at the opening of
annual full session of the 10th National People's Congress (NPC), the top
legislature.
Wen said the government will limit export of products
whose manufacture is highly energy consuming or highly polluting while
supporting the export of high value-added products and products with Chinese
trademarks, upgrading the processing trade and expanding the export of service
and agricultural products.
China will keep improving the mechanism for setting
the Yuan exchange rate, easing the imbalance in international payment and
optimizing foreign investment environment, the premier added.