G7 summit: Biden hits out at China’s ‘economic coercion’ but says thaw in ties may be on the way
- US president says group agrees on diversifying supply chains and de-risking without decoupling
- US position on Taiwan remains in favour of the status quo, he says
“We’re not looking to decouple from China. We’re looking to de-risk and diversify our relationship with China,” Biden said.
“That means taking steps to diversify our supply chains and so we’re not dependent on any one country for necessary products.
“It means resisting economic coercion.
“Together, countering harmful practices that hurt our workers means protecting a narrow set of advanced technologies critical for our national security. And those elements are all agreed on by the G7.”
China hit back at Biden’s claims, accusing the United States of unfair practices.
“The United States has engaged in unilateral sanctions, ‘supply chain decoupling’, and weaponisation of economic and trade issues,” the Chinese embassy in Britain said.
“It is the real coercion.”
The tensions have affected a wide range of sectors, particularly technology, with the US announcing a high-end chip ban in October and pressuring its allies to follow suit.
On Sunday, Biden revived the possibility of improvement in ties, saying he expected a thaw in the frosty relations with China “shortly”.
US officials have also discussed meeting their Chinese counterparts, and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao is expected to visit the US to attend an Apec meeting next week.
“Neither [China or Taiwan] territory can independently declare what they’re going to do, period,” he said.
“We made it clear that we don’t expect Taiwan to independently declare independence either.
“And there is clear understanding among most of our allies that in fact, if China were to act unilaterally, there would be a response.”
He also addressed the need to maintain stability in the South China Sea, a disputed waterway through which trillions of dollars in ship-borne commerce passes each year.
Biden’s message on China was echoed by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who said China represented the world’s greatest challenge to security and prosperity, but other leading economies should not seek to fully decouple from it.
“With the G7, we are taking steps to prevent China from using economic coercion to interfere in the sovereign affairs of others,” Sunak said.
Still, at least one G7 leader sought to strike a more amiable tone.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said G7 members would ensure big investments in China continued even as they pared risky exposure to the economic powerhouse.
Speaking to German broadcaster ZDF on the sidelines of the Hiroshima summit, Scholz said supply chains and exports to China would also continue.
He said that while the countries wanted to limit their risk exposure, no one had an interest in curbing growth in China.
Additional reporting by Reuters