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BEIJING: A general view shows China’s President Xi Jinping speaking during a meeting with a group of foreign executives at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 28, 2025. -- AFP
BEIJING: A general view shows China’s President Xi Jinping speaking during a meeting with a group of foreign executives at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 28, 2025. -- AFP

China’s door will ‘open wider and wider’, Xi tells foreign executives

Chinese leader warned of ‘severe challenges’ to global trade

BEIJING: Chinese leader Xi Jinping vowed Friday that the country’s door would “open wider and wider” as he met with foreign executives in Beijing. “China is firmly committed to advancing reform and opening up. The door of opening up will only open wider and wider,” Xi told the executives, including hedge fund boss Ray Dalio and Samsung Electronics chief Lee Jae-yong.

China has sought to woo foreign businesses as it faces down a mounting trade war with the United States under President Donald Trump, who has slapped swingeing tariffs on Chinese goods.

“China is committed to high-quality development and accelerating green, digital and intelligent transformation, and has strong industrial supporting capacity,” Xi said. “Foreign enterprises in China can develop their advantages and capabilities and gain an advantage in global competition.”

The Chinese leader warned of “severe challenges” to global trade, vowing to open the country’s door “wider and wider” to foreign firms as Beijing faces down a mounting trade war with the United States.

“Multilateralism is the inevitable choice for addressing the difficulties and challenges facing the world, and economic globalization is an unstoppable historical trend,” Xi said.

His comments were a veiled criticism of Trump’s recently imposed tariffs, which are dampening the prospects this year for Chinese exports after they soared to record highs last year.

Beijing has sought to woo foreign businesses as those global trade headwinds threaten its already-shaky economic growth. It has also positioned itself as a staunch defender of the multilateral trading system as the mercurial resident of the White House rocks the international order.

During Friday’s meeting, Xi called for upholding World Trade Organization rules, while promising China would continue to “advance trade and investment liberalization”. “All parties should work together to uphold the global economic order,” he said. He vowed that “foreign enterprises in China can develop their advantages and capabilities and gain an advantage in global competition”.

Exports have historically represented a key driver of growth in the manufacturing powerhouse, though increasing trade and geopolitical tensions are threatening that. Foreign enterprises in China have long complained of an unfair business environment, with IP theft, a lack of regulatory transparency and an uneven playing field with local firms among the laundry list of issues.

A sweeping counterespionage law imposed in 2023 has also done little to improve sentiment.

This week, US due diligence firm Mintz Group said that China had released five local employees detained more than two years ago during a crackdown on foreign consultancies with multinational links. Beijing later said the company was under investigation for suspected “illegal operations”, but did not provide details. Other US firms targeted in the 2023 crackdown included Bain & Company and Capvision. — AFP

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