Top officials promote new power relations
Thomas Donohue, president and CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce, and Zeng Peiyan, chairman of the China Center for International Economic Exchange and former Chinese vice-premier, open the fifth US-China CEO and Former Senior Officials Dialogue in Washington on Monday. Tamara Lundgren, CEO and president ofSchnitzer Steel Industries, is among the dozen US executives attending the Dialogue. Cai Chunying / China Daily |
Top business executives and former senior government officials from both China and the US sat down at the US Chamber of Commerce's headquarters in Washington Monday and Tuesday to discuss key issues in US-Chinese economic collaborations. The meeting attracted the attention of US Vice-President Joe Biden who met with 30 of the attendees, fifteen from each side.
"The US-China partnership is the cornerstone of this dialogue and it is also the cornerstone of our bilateral relationship," said Thomas Donohue, president and CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce, at the opening ceremony of the summit, which is titled US-China CEO and Former Senior Officials' Dialogue.
"We hope this dialogue will help promote the new type of great power economic and trade relationship," said Zeng Peiyan, a former Chinese vice-premier and current chairman of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges.
Accompanying Zeng were former senior Chinese government officials who now play important roles in various social and industrial sector, including: Zhou Wenzhong, former Chinese ambassador to the US and current secretary general of Bo'ao Forum for Asia, a major platform for economic collaboration among Asian countries, and Jin Liqun, former deputy Chinese minister of finance and vice-president of the Asian Development Bank and now chairman of China International Capital Corp, the first joint-venture and major investment bank in China.
The US side featured former US Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt and former US Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky and incumbents Secretary of Treasury Jacob Lew, Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, and US Trade Representative Michael Froman came and addressed the group.
According to the Chamber of Commerce, one of the goals of the dialogue was to "significantly increase channels for discussion of public policy and related issues between US and Chinese CEOs", while the views from former government officials with ample policy backgrounds provided strong input for the CEOs' discussions.
The Chinese group of corporate heads included Wan Long, chairman of Shuanghui International, which recently bought the biggest US pork producer Smithfield for $4.7 billion - the largest Chinese investment in the US so far; Xiang Wenbo, president of Sany Group, which built a 360,000-square-foot manufacturing base in Atlanta that employs more than 100 local workers; and Guo Guangchang, chairman of Fosun International, which bought New York City banking landmark One Chase Manhattan Plaza last Friday.
Counterbalancing the CEO roster on the US side were names like Daniel D'Aniello, chairman of the Carlyle Group; Klaus Kleinfeld, CEO of Alcoa; Michael Ducker, president of FedEx; and Rob Speyer, co-CEO of Tishman Speyer, all companies that have robust investment in China.
Building on the four summits that have been held over the past three years, the fifth dialogue focused its discussions on the Bilateral Investment Treaty, an ambitious initiative proposed during the most recent US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue between the two countries.
Anticipating that the newly-established Shanghai Free Trade Zone would be of great interest to American attendees, Ai Baojun, deputy mayor of Shanghai and director of the Free Trade Zone governing committee, came as a special guest.
Participants also discussed the opportunities for Chinese investment in US infrastructure. As a tradition, a joint statement was issued at the end of the summit, calling the two governments to consider negotiating a comprehensive trade and investment treaty to further open up to each other and actively promote the new type of great power economic relations.