Paulson met with China’s president Hin Jintao plus a number of finance and economic ministers and used the opportunity to push for increased financial sector liberalisation, emphasizing the benefits a loosening of regulations would bring.
“For the life of me, I cannot understand why China letting in strong foreign firms, which are regulated by the Chinese, would undermine stability. It would help stability,” he said. However this talk of increased China access comes at a time when tension between the two giant economies is growing. On July 31 the U.S. Commerce Department agreed to investigate claims that Chinese OTR tyre producers were ‘dumping’ their products in the U.S. market.
In response, China’s Commerce Ministry stated that investigations such the fifth to be conduction within a twelve-month timeframe were “not only extremely unfair towards Chinese manufacturers…[they were] also not helpful for developing mutually beneficial bilateral economic and trade relations.” Beijing’s People’s Daily newspaper has quoted a Ministry of Commerce spokesman, Wang Xinpei, as calling the investigation an “unwise, wrong move.” Wang also claimed that the dual U.S. anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations were an abuse of World Trade Organisation rules.