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4/8/2024

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at a Press Conference in Beijing, the People’s Republic of China | …

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at a Press
Conference in Beijing, the People’s Republic of China
April 8, 2024

As Prepared for Delivery

PROGRESS OVER T HE PAST Y EAR
Iʼd like to begin by speaking about the groundwork that we have laid over the past year.
Last April, I outlined our Administrationʼs approach to our economic relationship with China.
President Biden and I are clear-eyed about the complexities of this relationship. Our priorities
include protecting our national security and that of our allies, advancing an objective of a
healthy economic relationship with a level playing field for American workers and firms, and
cooperating with China where both countries can and must.
It is undeniable that the U.S.-China relationship is on stronger footing today than this time
last year. This was not preordained. It was the direct result of President Bidenʼs guidance to
me and
his cabinet to intensify our diplomacy with China and put a floor under the relationship. Over
the past year, I have met in person with my Chinese counterpart Vice Premier He Lifeng three
times, including in the San Francisco Bay Area where I call home. We established Economic
and Financial Working Groups that have seen substantive, in-depth economic conversations.
These build on the candid and constructive meeting between President Biden and President
Xi in Woodside, California last November.
Through these exchanges, my team and I have been able to advance the interests of the
American people. We have set forth our own economic policy priorities and gained an
improved understanding of Chinaʼs. We have advocated for specific steps to ensure American
workers and firms are treated fairly. We have directly communicated American national
security concerns, and both countries have clarified potential misunderstandings to prevent
unintentional escalation. And we have restarted cooperation on issues where our interests
coincide. Last November, the Vice Premier and I took the important step of a irming key areas
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of agreement, including a commitment to work toward a healthy economic relationship that
provides a level playing field for both countries.
This progress matters. Given the size of our economies, the U.S.-China economic relationship
is among the most important bilateral economic relationships in the world. And it matters
deeply for American workers and firms. In turn, the American people expect their leaders to do
the hard work of economic diplomacy. Thatʼs not the type that always generates headlines.
Itʼs one that keeps at it despite the noise—in order to advance a responsible approach to the
complex challenges that we face.
President Biden and I are committed to such an approach. And it is what brought me here to
China.

KEY ST EPS F ORW ARD DURING T RIP TO CHINA
Over the past week, I have had the opportunity to make progress on issues that matter to
Americans. Iʼve had productive, direct, and extensive meetings over four days in Guangzhou
and Beijing with Chinaʼs economic leadership, including Premier Li, Vice Premier He, Governor
Pan, and Finance Minister Lan. I have also met with those outside of the central government,
including American and other foreign businesses, Chinese academics and students, and local
government leaders with practical, on-the-ground economic policy responsibilities.
Let me outline three areas where weʼve made significant progress this week.

Exchanges on Balanced Growth in the Domestic and Global Economies
First, Vice Premier He and I agreed to launch intensive exchanges on balanced growth in the
domestic and global economies. This represents an important part of my e ort to advocate
for American workers and businesses and gain a better understanding of certain PRC
macroeconomic policies. Let me explain.
During conversations this week, I underscored again that the United States does not seek to
decouple from China. Our two economies are deeply integrated, and a wholesale separation
would be disastrous for both of our economies. Even as we take actions to diversify our
supply chains, we seek to preserve the broader trade and investment relationship that can
benefit American workers and firms. China is a key market for American products and services.
And competition between our firms can spur greater dynamism and innovation in American
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industries. The American businesses that I spoke to in Guangzhou underscored the significant
benefits of a healthy economic relationship.
At the same time, I expressed concern to senior Chinese o icials that there are features of the
Chinese economy that have growing negative spillovers on the U.S. and the globe. I am
particularly worried about how Chinaʼs enduring macroeconomic imbalances—namely its weak
household consumption and business overinvestment, aggravated by large-scale government
support in specific industrial sectors—will lead to significant risk to workers and businesses in
the United States and the rest of the world. China has long had excess savings, but
investment in the real estate sector and government-funded infrastructure had absorbed
much of it. Now, we are seeing an increase in business investment in a number of “new”
industries targeted by the PRCʼs industrial policy. That includes electric vehicles, lithium-ion
batteries, and solar.
China is now simply too large for the rest of the world to absorb this enormous capacity.
Actions taken by the PRC today can shi world prices. And when the global market is flooded
by artificially cheap Chinese products, the viability of American and other foreign firms is put
into question.
Weʼve seen this story before. Over a decade ago, massive PRC government support led to
below-cost Chinese steel that flooded the global market and decimated industries across the
world and in the United States. Iʼve made clear that President Biden and I will not accept that
reality again. I know that these serious concerns are shared by our allies and partners, from
advanced economies to emerging markets.
Chinaʼs excess capacity has built up over a significant amount of time, and our concerns will
not be resolved in a week or a month. But the exchanges that we announced during this trip
will provide a dedicated structure for us to raise our concerns about Chinaʼs imbalances and
overcapacity—among a wide range of other topics—in a detailed and targeted manner. We
intend to underscore the need for a shi in policy by China during these talks—building on the
over two hours I spent on this topic with the Vice Premier last week. This is a part of our e ort
to advocate for American industries and prevent the significant economic disruptions weʼve
seen in the past.
Itʼs important to note that I firmly believe that addressing these imbalances in an appropriate
way will not only be good for the U.S. and the world. It will also be good for Chinaʼs long-term
productivity and growth. Importantly, we have and will continue to emphasize that our
concern about overcapacity is not animated by anti-China sentiment or a desire to decouple.
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Rather, it is driven by a desire to prevent global economic dislocation and move toward a
healthy economic relationship with China.

Anti-Money Laundering Cooperation
Second, I was pleased to announce that we are expanding cooperation with China in our
shared work against illicit finance. At home, President Biden and I have taken major steps to
prevent illicit actors from exploiting the U.S. financial system and to hold them accountable
when they do. But the United States cannot do it alone. Weaknesses in financial regulatory
regimes abroad—in China and other countries around the world—also provide an avenue for
financing for criminal organizations, human tra ickers, drug tra ickers, fraudsters, and other
malicious actors that can harm Americans and our national security. From now on, a new Joint
Treasury- PBOC Cooperation and Exchange on Anti-Money Laundering, established during this
trip, will enable our countries to share best practices and information to clamp down on
loopholes in our respective financial systems. Iʼve asked my team to begin these meetings
very soon, and we look forward to reporting on our progress.
Iʼm also pleased that illicit finance is a critical component of Treasuryʼs work with the PBOC as
part of the U.S.-PRC Counternarcotics Working Group. Exchanging information on money
laundering as it relates to tra icking of fentanyl and other illicit synthetic drugs can help us
disrupt the flow of illicit narcotics, precursor chemicals, and equipment. The opioid epidemic is
a crisis that a ects every community in the United States, large or small, with more than 150
Americans dying each day. Treasury is committed to using all of our tools, including
international cooperation, to counter this threat.

Financial Technical Exchanges and Broader Cooperation with China
Third, we are announcing that we will continue a series of financial technical exchanges
between the United States and China. Just like military leaders need a hotline in a crisis,
American and Chinese financial regulators must be able to communicate to prevent financial
stresses from turning into crises with tremendous ramifications for our citizens and the
international community. Over the past few months, we have hosted several exercises with
China, including on how we would coordinate if there were to be a failure of a large bank in
either of our countries. Iʼm pleased that we will hold upcoming exchanges on operational
resilience in the financial sector and on financial stability implications from the insurance
sectorʼs exposure to climate risks.
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These are the types of discussions that we have with other major economies, since we know a
financial issue in a foreign country can quickly cascade to ours. I am glad that we are doing
the same with China.
This technical exchange builds on other spheres of cooperation. This includes our e orts to
alleviate debt distress in emerging markets and developing countries. We have seen progress
over the past few months on specific debt cases, such as Zambiaʼs. I have and will continue to
push as hard as I can to build greater momentum in other outstanding debt cases. I have also
been pleased by the progress we have made in conversations around sustainable finance and
am committed to moving our climate cooperation with China forward.

Macroeconomy and National Security
Alongside these specific steps, I also exchanged views with Chinese o icials on the
macroeconomy and national security. I shared my assessment that the American economy
remains strong, with President Bidenʼs historic economic agenda driving both our current
resilience and long-term growth. We also discussed risks to the resilient global outlook. I was
able to learn more about how the Chinese government views their current economic and
financial situation and the steps that they have and are contemplating taking. These
exchanges help inform our governmentʼs own economic decision-making.
We also had di icult conversations about national security. President Biden and I are
determined to do all that we can to stem the flow of material that is supporting Russiaʼs
defense industrial base and helping it to wage war against Ukraine. We continue to be
concerned about the role that any firms, including those in the PRC, are playing in Russiaʼs
military procurement. I stressed that companies, including those in the PRC, must not provide
material support for Russiaʼs war and that they will face significant consequences if they do.
And I reinforced that any banks that facilitate significant transactions that channel military or
dual-use goods to Russiaʼs defense industrial base expose themselves to the risk of U.S.
sanctions.
We also exchanged information on the use of economic tools in the national security space.
Going forward, I believe that we must continue to discuss how each side defines national
security in the economic sphere. While the U.S. needs to continually evaluate its national
security measures given the rapid pace of technological development, we are committed to
“no surprises.” We have privately and publicly laid out our perspective at length, along with the
principles and process that we undertake in formulating our policies. Our actions are
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implemented through transparent rules and regulations with ample comment periods. We
would welcome transparency from the PRC on its national security actions and greater clarity
on where it sees the line between national security and economic issues. This would provide
greater stability to the relationship while also helping bolster confidence for firms doing
business with the PRC, which is in Chinaʼs interest.
Vice Premier He and I committed to stay in close touch about these issues. The United States
will also be hosting our Chinese counterparts next week for the fourth meetings of the
Economic and Financial Working Groups, where these issues will be discussed at length.

CLOSING
Let me end with this. The work of diplomacy is not easy. But in the few months since the
Woodside Summit—and certainly since I visited Beijing last summer—we have taken major
steps to stabilize the U.S.-China bilateral relationship. And during this trip, we have been able
to build on that foundation to move the ball forward on specific issues that matter to
Americans.
That does not mean we have resolved all our di erences. There is much more work to do. And
it remains unclear what this relationship will endure in the months and years ahead.
But as we proceed, we must remember that its trajectory is not predestined. It depends on
the choices that each of our countries make. I know that the American people expect a cleareyed approach to China: one that proceeds with confidence about the economic strength of
our country and protects our national security while finding a way forward so that both
countries can live in a world of peace and prosperity. The President and I are firmly committed
to continue to deliver on that.
Iʼll take your questions.
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