Current:Home > NewsTreasury Secretary Janet Yellen to go to China -Quantum Capital Pro
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to go to China
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:47:25
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will travel to China this week and will meet with senior government officials, as well as U.S. firms doing business in China.
Her visit builds on President Biden's directive after his meeting last year with President Xi Jinping to deepen communications between the world's two largest economies, a senior Treasury official said Sunday. Yellen does not expect to meet directly with Xi, the official said.
But at a fundraiser in June, Mr. Biden equated Xi to "dictators," sparking the ire of the Chinese. Beijing's foreign ministry responded by calling Mr. Biden's comments "ridiculous" and amounted to "open political provocation."
Yellen will be traveling from July 6-9. While in Beijing, Yellen will discuss with officials the importance of the two countries to manage relationships, communicate directly on areas of concern, and work together to address global challenges. The senior Treasury official said the secretary has no intention of shying away from U.S. views on human rights, and it's a topic that will likely come up during the visit.
In April, Yellen laid out how the U.S. views the three pillars of the U.S.-China bilateral economic relationship in a speech. Those pillars are: the U.S. taking targeted action to secure national security interests and will protect human rights; the U.S. seeking a healthy economic relationship with China, not a decoupling, but the U.S. will respond with allies to unfair practices by China; and third, the U.S. wants to cooperate on challenges of the day including on the global economy, combating climate change, and debt.
Yellen's visit to China comes after the secretary has said numerous times that she hoped to go to China when it is appropriate. In an interview just last week, Yellen said her hope in traveling to China is to reestablish contact.
"What I've tried to make clear is that the United States is taking actions and will continue to take actions intended to protect our national security interest. And we'll do that even if it imposes some economic cost on us, but we believe that a healthy economic relationship, healthy competition that benefits both American businesses and workers and Chinese businesses and workers, this is something that is possible and desirable that we really welcome and want to have, a healthy economic relationship, and we think it's generally beneficial," Yellen said on MSNBC.
Yellen's trip also comes on the heels of Secretary of State Antony Blinken's trip to the country in June, which included a meeting with Xi and other high-ranking government officials.
Blinken's high-profile trip came months after a trip scheduled for February had to be postponed amid the fallout from the U.S. military shooting down a suspected Chinese spy balloon.
- In:
- Janet Yellen
- China
CBS News reporter covering economic policy.
TwitterveryGood! (4)
Related
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Krispy Kreme giving away free doughnuts on July 4 to customers in red, white and blue
- Man arrested in 2001 murder of Maryland woman; daughter says he’s her ex-boyfriend
- Biden campaign targets Latino voters for Copa América
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- California workplace safety board approves heat protections for indoor workers, excluding prisons
- Prison, restitution ordered for ex-tribal leader convicted of defrauding Oglala Sioux Tribe
- DNC plans to hit Trump in Philadelphia on his relationship with Black community
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Lakers hire J.J. Redick as head coach
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Biden and allied Republicans are trying to rally GOP women in swing-state suburbs away from Trump
- Kevin Costner says he won't be returning to Yellowstone: It was something that really changed me
- Climate activists arrested for spray-painting private jets orange at London airport
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- 2 crop dusting airplanes collided in southern Idaho, killing 1 pilot and severely injuring the other
- Biden campaign targets Latino voters for Copa América
- Actor Ian McKellen hospitalized after falling off stage in London
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Jury to begin deliberating in murder trial of suburban Seattle officer who killed a man in 2019
Escape from killer New Mexico wildfire was ‘absolute sheer terror,’ says woman who fled the flames
New state program aims to put 500,000 acres of Montana prairie under conservation leases
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Facial recognition startup Clearview AI settles privacy suit
Social platform X decides to hide 'likes' after updating policy to allow porn
She asked 50 strangers to figure out how she should spend her $27 million inheritance. Here's what they came up with.