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Top World News Fri, 26 Mar 1999, 8:24pm EST
U.S., China Move Closer to Breakthrough on WTO Membership Before Zhu Visit
U.S., China Move Closer to Breakthrough on WTO Before Zhu Visit
Washington, March 26 (Bloomberg) -- The Clinton administration is close to backing China's entry in the World Trade Organization after the Asia nation promised to open its markets to everything from AT&T Corp. telecommunications equipment to North Dakota wheat, analysts, company officials and Clinton aides said.
The two sides are aiming for an announcement before Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji arrives in the U.S. April 6 for a state visit, said U.S. negotiators and executives briefed on the negotiations. Final details have yet to be worked out, and business groups like the U.S.-China Business Council and the Business Roundtable are gearing up for a lobbying campaign to prevent Congress from trying to block it. ''What we hear is very encouraging,'' said Thomas Tripp, Washington spokesman for Seattle-based airplane maker Boeing Co., which expects China to buy about $120 billion in new aircraft over the next 20 years. ''The critical issue is to ensure that what comes back is an agreement that makes significant progress in opening up China's market to American exports and services.''
U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky may travel to China this weekend or early next week to conclude talks, a Clinton aide close to the trade talks said.
Barshefsky will press China to allow foreigners to take as much as a 50 percent stake in telecommunications companies by a date certain, a company official briefed on the discussions and an aide familiar with the planning said. She also wants China to further open its market for insurers like American International Group, Inc. and Indiana based-Lincoln National Corp. the 10th largest U.S. life insurer, the two officials said.
WTO Requirements
WTO entry would require China to slash its protective tariffs, open its markets and end the long-held requirement that doing business in China required a shotgun marriage with a local partner.
China and the WTO have been dickering for nearly 13 years over whether the Asian giant should be allowed into the trade organization before its own markets are completely open. ''China, not the United States, will have to do the heavy lifting to open its trade regime and rearrange the way it conducts its economic affairs,'' said Robert Kapp, president of the U.S.-China Business Council. ''This is what makes these negotiations so difficult for the Chinese.'' ''We're hopeful but it's not a sure deal,'' said Michael Maibach, Intel Corp.'s vice president of the company's government affairs office in Washington, who has been briefed by USTR negotiators. ''Zhu has to be able to break the eggs to make the omelet in his own country, where investment is declining and there is higher unemployment,'' Maibach said. ''During tougher times, it's tougher to make change.''
Zhu's Role
Zhu took a direct role in the talks, putting his personal prestige on the line. ''I have felt a sea change in the expectations of companies doing business with China in just the last couple of weeks and in the last 24 hours several executives said quite likely a deal will get done,'' said Dan Tarullo, formerly Clinton's top international economist and now a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations.
So far, China has proposed opening its telecommunications to foreign investment by 2005, with a ceiling of 35 percent ownership. Foreigners now are barred from investing in Chinese telephone companies. AT&T and BellSouth Corp. already have been doing some limited business in China. ''From an investor's point of view, 35 percent is probably enough,'' said Laurie Sherman, a former USTR lawyer now with Paull, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, a Washington-based law firm. ''It gets you reasonable control. And you probably wouldn't survive in a Chinese market alone anyway.'' 'Huge Opportunities'
There are ''huge opportunities'' for Lucent Technologies Inc. and Motorola Inc. if China agrees to start buying foreign telephone equipment, Sherman said.
China also proposed allowing joint venture retail banks and insurance companies in selected cities of China by 2005, according to an administration official close to the discussions.
A push for more concessions from China came yesterday at a White House meeting between President Bill Clinton, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, key economic aides and Barshefsky, two Clinton aides familiar with the discussions said.
The conclusion: while the Chinese had progressed farther than expected in the past two weeks, they must offer more on telecommunications, insurance and banking for an agreement to pass muster on Capitol Hill, a Clinton aide familiar with the meeting said. ''The meeting at the White House was the best news I've heard on this,'' said Nicholas Lardy, a China scholar at the Brookings Institute, a Washington think tank. ''It shows that Clinton is focusing on this and Barshefsky can walk away knowing precisely what is the administration's bottom line.''
Insurers urged Barshefsky to urge the Chinese to allow them to sell property-casualty life insurance in more Chinese cities, and to oppose any Chinese effort to limit foreign ownership of insurance companies to 50 percent.
Currently, China allows 100 percent foreign-owned affiliates including branches, Robert Vagley, president of the American Insurance Association, said in a letter to Barshefsky today. ''We strongly urge the Chinese be told in no uncertain terms that they cannot retreat on this most crucial issue,'' Vagley said.
Stumbling Blocks
Textile trade is another stumbling block. The U.S. wants to keep quotas, or import limits, on Chinese textile exports in place for 10 years after China enters the WTO.
China wants the quotas phased out in five years, a decade after the WTO itself began to operate. The U.S., which has negotiated about 100 separate quotas on Chinese exports of clothing, fabric, handbags, linens and other products imported about $5 billion worth of these goods from China last year, down from $6 billion in 1997.
The U.S. is also pushing for so-called tariff-rate quotas for imports on farm produce including corn and wheat in which China would reduce existing tariffs on imports and set quotas. The quotas and import restrictions would be phased out. The U.S. also wants China to lift its ban on U.S. white wheat tainted by TCK fungus, a ban that has been in place for more than 20 years, aides said.
The pace of negotiations on agricultural products picked up in recent days, according to James Schroeder, deputy undersecretary at the Agriculture Department who just returned from negotiations in Beijing. ''They are definitely engaged, we seem to be making progress,'' he said. ''We're not there yet.''
Political Currents
China bought $1.6 billion in U.S. grains, meats and other products last year, making it the eighth biggest customer in the world. U.S. farm exports could jump 69 percent to $2.7 billion a year if China entered the WTO tomorrow, according to Agriculture Department figures.
The discussions over agriculture have been particularly difficult because traditionally China has tried to placate farmers. Most Chinese uprisings, including Mao Zedong's Communist movement, have started first in the countryside, and unrest in the countryside makes Chinese leaders particularly nervous.
Clinton aides also are treading carefully. For China to join the WTO, Congress must extend permanent most-favored-nation trading status to Beijing. That's difficult in the current atmosphere, as Congress launches investigations into Chinese espionage in this country.
Congressional Tension ''There is growing unrest, and I believe it is on both sides of the aisle, about China,'' said House Majority Leader Dick Armey, a Texas Republican. That could jeopardize plans to let China join the WTO, he said.
White House aides say they expect the business community to urge Congress to support an agreement. ''They have to be careful,'' said Lardy. ''If the administration's strategy is to not submit it right away, Congress could perceive that as a sign of weakness and that could bring the agreement under even more fire.''
That's why Clinton is focused on getting a strong agreement. ''We're looking for China to enter the WTO on commercially viable terms that are in our national interest,'' Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart said today, declining to give details on the negotiations. ''We need a good deal, and we won't take anything short of that.''
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