US askes Taiwan to end trade limits (AP) Updated: 2006-05-27 11:08
TAIPEI - The deputy U.S. trade representative on Friday called on Taiwan to
lift its restrictions on trade with Chinese mainland, saying the island was
putting its own businesses at a disadvantage.
Deputy U.S. Trade
Representative Karan Bhatia pauses before addressing members of the
American Chamber of Commerce during a luncheon, Friday, May 26, 2006, in
Taipei, Taiwan. [AP] | Karan Bhatia, the highest
ranking American official to visit Taiwan in six years, arrived Wednesday for
two days of talks with local officials on trade issues including
pharmaceuticals, intellectual property rights, agriculture and
telecommunications.
Earlier Friday, he rejected an appeal from "President" Chen Shui-bian to
begin negotiations on a free trade agreement between Washington and the
island, saying congressional restrictions prevented the administration from
beginning a new round of FTA talks.
Speaking to the American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei on the question
of cross Strait trade ties, Bhatia said that Taiwanese
restrictions on economic exchanges with the mainland were harming its own
economy.
While economic exchanges between the sides resumed in the early 1990s, Chen's
independence leaning government has resisted tightening links.
In his remarks to the American chamber, Bhatia specifically criticized
Taiwan's restrictions on technology transfers and investment in mainland, travel
to Taiwan by mainland employees of multinational firms, and the absence of
direct transportation links between the two sides.
The restrictions "combine to create uncertainty as well as a distinctive
competitive disadvantage for Taiwan," he said, adding that they deter
multinational companies from investing on the island.
Bhatia also poured cold water on the idea of negotiations on a free trade
agreement between Taiwan and the United States, which Chen brought up during
their meeting earlier in the day.
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