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TRADE WARS
US says China trade talks achieve 'concrete' results
by Staff Writers
Chengdu, China (AFP) Nov 21, 2011

China hopes Spanish vote will boost confidence
Beijing (AFP) Nov 21, 2011 - China said Monday it hoped the commanding victory by Spain's conservatives in legislative elections over the weekend would usher in confidence to boost markets around the world.

Spain's right stormed to its biggest election win ever Sunday, unleashing dancing in the street by voters desperate for an end to soaring unemployment and a eurozone debt storm.

"We hope relevant changes will uplift market confidence," China's foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters.

"China hopes that European countries including Spain, Italy and Greece will overcome current difficulties."

It was further hoped that the election result would also help the European Union implement a package of reforms aimed at addressing the crisis, he added.

China holds about 12 percent of Spain's debt.

Spain's government was the last to fall among the eurozone's so-called periphery nations this year after Ireland, Portugal, Greece and Italy all succumbed to a collapse of confidence in their sovereign debt.

With more than 99 percent of the ballots counted, Mariano Rajoy's Popular Party had 44.60 percent of the vote and an absolute majority of 186 seats in the 350-member Congress of Deputies.

The win gives Rajoy a free hand to ram through severe austerity measures in the eurozone's fourth biggest economy.


The United States on Monday hailed key trade talks with China as a success, saying they had made "meaningful, concrete progress" on piracy and market access, but warned more work needed to be done.

US Commerce Secretary John Bryson said China had pledged to better enforce intellectual property rights and give US firms a "level playing field" in strategic emerging industries, in which China vowed to invest $1.7 trillion over five years.

But China's controversial currency controls -- a major thorn in the side of US-China ties -- were not discussed at the meeting of the Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT), Bryson said.

"Overall this year's JCCT resulted in meaningful, concrete progress," Bryson told reporters after the negotiations, which he described as "tough".

"At the same time, we have a complex trade relationship and not surprisingly significantly more work yet to do."

This year's meeting in the southwestern city of Chengdu took place against a background of growing rivalry between the world's two largest economies and the turmoil in Europe, which threatens to tip the planet back into recession.

In recent months US lawmakers, under intense pressure to spur jobs growth as they enter an election year, have blamed Chinese policies for their country's economic woes and the atmosphere at the JCCT talks was frosty at the start.

Vice Premier Wang Qishan -- China's top finance official -- said earlier the Asian country had made "positive progress" addressing US concerns and called on the Americans to "avoid politicisation of economic issues".

"An unbalanced recovery is better than a balanced recession," Wang said, referring to the turbulence in Europe and the United States.

Bryson, meanwhile, expressed frustration with China, saying the sides had not made sufficient progress during the first day of talks on Sunday and that it was "time to work hard and deliver results".

"Many in the United States, including the business community and the Congress, are moving towards a more negative view on our trading relationship," Bryson said.

But by the end of the talks, Bryson said China had agreed to set up a special office -- headed by Wang -- to coordinate the enforcement of intellectual property rights.

China also pledged it would create a "level playing field" for US companies investing in strategic emerging industries, such as clean energy, and allow foreign automakers to invest in the green vehicle market without transferring their technology to Chinese enterprises or establishing a local brand.

The two sides also signed agreements including a memorandum of understanding on energy cooperation and an action plan for cooperation on high-tech trade.

Chinese officials -- who had demanded the United States provide equal access for domestic firms investing in the world's economic superpower -- told reporters they had had "frank" discussions with their US counterparts.

Wang said he hoped the US side would "make substantive progress" in relaxing controls on high-tech exports to China and "exercise caution" in taking action against Chinese shipments, a key driver of the world's second-largest economy.

Wang's comments came after he warned on Saturday that China needed to resolve "structural problems" in its financial system to cope with a sustained global recession that threatens its export-dependent economy.

"The one thing we can be sure of is that the global economic recession will last for a long time," the state Xinhua news agency quoted him as saying.

Ties between Beijing and Washington have been strained after a string of US lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle stepped up criticism of China's yuan exchange rate, which they argue is grossly undervalued and costs US jobs.

US President Barack Obama -- facing an election in November next year -- said recently Beijing had not done enough to allow the yuan to reach a fair market value and called on a now "grown up" China to act more responsibly.

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Apple accepts payment in China's yuan currency
Shanghai (AFP) Nov 21, 2011 - Apple has started accepting payment in China's yuan currency through its online store, opening it up to the biggest Internet market in the world, company officials said Monday.

The App Store, which sells software applications for devices such as iPhone and iPad, started accepting the unit last week in an unannounced move.

"The service has been there since last Friday. It's really good news for our customers and local application developers," a spokeswoman for Apple China told AFP. She declined to comment on the timing of the move.

The App Store previously listed prices and accepted payment in US dollars, requiring consumers to use payment cards with access to foreign exchange.

The online store will now accept yuan credit cards as well as debit cards issued by more than 20 banks, a customer service representative said.

Chinese customers applauded the move. "It's more convenient. I immediately bought Fruit Ninja," Xiang Ke said on his microblog, referring to a popular game.

Die-hard fans in China, which has the world's largest online population with more than 500 million users, have been known to line up for days to get their hands on the latest Apple products.

The California-based has recently expanded aggressively in China, opening its first store in Hong Kong and its third in Shanghai in September, which brings the total to six in Greater China.

Greater China -- which includes Hong Kong and Taiwan -- has become Apple's fastest growing region, with revenue there second only to the United States.

But analysts said allowing yuan payment might not give a big boost to revenue since Apple users can also download pirated applications for free.

"Users who do not want to spend money in the first place will not spend money simply because you allow them to pay in yuan," said Sun Peilin, a Beijing-based analyst with consultancy Analysys International.

Still, the craze for all things Apple in China has triggered widespread cloning of the company's devices.

Several Chinese online stores have offered Apple fans the opportunity to buy a next-generation iPhone 5 -- even though it does not yet exist.

In July, an American blogger uncovered fake Apple stores in the southwestern city of Kunming, where even staff working there did not appear to know they were fake.



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Thousands strike at China factory: rights group
Beijing (AFP) Nov 19, 2011
More than 7,000 workers went on strike at a southern Chinese factory making New Balance, Adidas and Nike shoes, clashing with police in a protest over layoffs and wage cuts, a rights group said. Dozens of workers were injured on Thursday as police tried to break the strikers' blockade of the main road in the factory town near Dongguan in Guangdong province, China Labor Watch said in a statem ... read more


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