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Past Event

A Foreign Policy and John L. Thornton China Center Event

President Hu Jintao's Visit: The Economic Challenges and Opportunities

Asia

Event Summary

On the eve of President Hu Jintao's long-anticipated visit to Washington, critical economic policy issues loom large for both the U.S. and China. Over the past two decades, China has transformed into a major economic power and continues to play a growing role in the global community. Its ascension is likely to be one of our most complex and vital foreign policy challenges for many years to come. Heated policy debates surround China on currency revaluation, the magnitude of global economic imbalances, the current U.S. account deficit, and the ongoing accumulation of U.S. financial securities by the Chinese central bank.

Event Information

When

Monday, April 10, 2006
12:00 AM to

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

To examine these issues, the Brookings Global Economy and Development Center, the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies, and the China Initiative will co-host a discussion on the increasingly complicated economic relationship between the U.S. and China. A group of leading experts will participate: Wing Thye Woo, professor, University of California at Davis, and director, East Asia Program, Center on Globalization and Sustainable Development at Columbia University; Erik Berglöf, senior fellow, Global Economy and Development Center, Brookings, and chief economist, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; and Jing Huang, senior fellow, China Initiative, Brookings. Lael Brainard, vice president and director of the Global Economy and Development Center will moderate the discussion.

A question and answer session will follow remarks.

Transcript

LAEL BRAINARD: Next week, President Bush will be welcoming Chinese President Hu Jintao to the White House for the first time, and this week, as we speak, the indomitable Vice Premier, Wu Yi, is leading over 100 Chinese business executives on a 13-state tour, known by some as Checkbook Diplomacy, that promises to result in tens of billions of dollars of additional U.S. exports. A lot of people are wondering if that is going to be enough to satisfy the domestic needs of President Bush who is facing pressures at home to get tough with China on their currency, on intellectual property, and on the trade surplus with the U.S.

Of course, President Hu Jintao comes here with a very different agenda. I am sure he wants very much to preserve good trade relations with the U.S., his primary trading partner. But China is growing much more assertive on the international stage and, of course, their economy is going gangbusters, and managing that growth at home is surprisingly complicated.

Today, we have three experts, all members of the extended Brookings' family, to provide some insights into that, particularly from the Chinese side but into the domestic priorities of both of the leaders and how they are viewing this visit in the context of the broader trade/investment relationship.

Read the full transcript (PDF—108kb)

Participants

Moderator

Lael Brainard

Vice President and Director, Global Economy and Development


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