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Hu touts China trade as potential fix for U.S. woes

January 29th, 2012

The summit, to be hosted by Obama in the state where he was born, has been billed as an effort to make progress on forging a new free-trade area and an environmental technology pact, steps that could eventually foster global growth.

TRADE GRIPES

“Currently, instability and uncertainty of world economic recovery are growing,” Hu said. “Under this type of situation, we especially need the world to cross the river in the same boat, and respond hand-in-hand with a spirit of cooperation and mutual benefit.”

The U.S. Commerce Department said on Wednesday it would investigate whether Chinese companies sell solar panels in the United States at unfair discounts and receive illegal government subsidies.

Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming reiterated China’s “grave concerns” over the solar investigation in a meeting with U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk.

Chen criticised the United States for calling for free trade on environmental goods in the same breath as it announces it is exploring trade remedies against China, a statement on the ministries website (www.mofcom.gov.cn) said.

(Reporting by Michael Martina)

But the United States’ laundry list of complaints about unfair business practice is long, with China’s solar industry at the heart of recent debate about whether it unfairly subsidizes and supports it domestic industries.

To achieve that ambition, the two countries should expand trade in new and clean energy, emissions efficiency, pharmaceuticals, aviation and aerospace, Hu said, according to a statement on the Foreign Ministry’s website (fmprc.gov.cn).

Chinese officials have expressed doubts about U.S. goals at APEC, including a green growth initiative that would cap tariffs on environmental goods and services, such as solar panels and wind turbines, at 5 percent.

On Monday, Chinese officials called Obama’s APEC plans too ambitious, noting that his tariff reduction plan would unfairly target developing economies and not require any U.S. action.

U.S.-China trade relations could be “limitless,” President Hu Jintao said on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Honolulu, during a meeting with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and major companies, including Wal-Mart and FedEx.

Those comments echoed concerns expressed by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a speech early in the day, when she called on China to “end unfair discrimination” against foreign companies and their technologies and intellectual property.

“If the United States soon loosens its limitations on technology exports to China, it will not only be good for relieving unbalanced trade, it will also promote the U.S. economy and employment,” he said.

The APEC gathering is also a chance for the United States to reassert its leadership in a region where China poses a growing competitive threat.

HONOLULU (Reuters) China’s president told the U.S. business community on Thursday that trade relations between the two countries are win-win, selling his country as a U.S. export market while defending it as a fair competitor on tariff rates and intellectual property.

Hu defended China’s tariff rates in his meeting with U.S. business leaders, saying that China had dropped its overall tariffs from 15.3 percent to 9.8 percent in the nearly 10 years since it joined the World Trade Organization, putting it “far below” average rates for developing countries.

China’s imports will hopefully exceed $8 trillion in the next five years, with consumer goods imports worth $5 trillion by 2015, Hu said, making China a huge market to help the United States revive manufacturing and reach President Barack Obama’s “export doubling” goal.

Hu arrived in Hawaii on Thursday ahead of a weekend of meetings with Asia-Pacific leaders at a summit already overshadowed by growing alarm over the fallout from euro-zone upheaval.

Addressing a long-held complaint among the foreign business community in China, Hu said that enforcing implementation of China’s already established intellectual property legal framework was a priority.

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81-year-old Chinese sets self on fire in protest

January 29th, 2012

BEIJING An 81-year-old woman died after setting herself on fire in her bedroom as a demolition team led by local officials were trying to knock down her home, Chinese media reported Wednesday.

The official, who would give only his surname Jia as is common in China, said the family told police they were storing gasoline because they had a generator. He said 16 firefighters rushed to the scene, extinguished the fire and found Wang’s body.

It said the Erqi district party committee propaganda department said her home had been illegally constructed and issued a demolition order. Caijing quoted an unnamed lawyer for the family as saying the house was built more than 10 years ago and the government only said recently it was illegal.

It is one of several recent self-immolation cases related to property seizures in China. Some of the most passionate protests in the authoritarian country have been against local officials who have taken people’s houses, often with little or no compensation, to make way for development.

Caijing and Southern Metropolis said the victim’s son and daughter-in-law were detained for 10 days for disturbing public order. Southern Metropolis said six family members were initially detained after Wang’s death, including her granddaughter and 2-year-old great-grandson, who were released the same day.

Although not related, the incident comes on the heels of 11 self-immolations in China in recent months involving monks, former monks and nuns protesting Chinese rule in Tibet.

Financial magazine Caijing said Wang Liushi died after self-immolating on Nov. 3 in her family’s house in central Henan province.

The Southern Metropolis newspaper quoted Wang’s son, Wang Haorong, as saying officials from Zhengzhou city council and the Erqi Law Enforcement Bureau and a demolition team of about 300 came to the family’s house.

An official at the propaganda department of the Communist Party’s branch in Zhengzhou confirmed one death but said it was a “fire accident.”

The paper said Wang’s son and daughter-in-law climbed onto the roof and poured gasoline over themselves in a bid to stop the demolition team. The daughter-in-law said she heard a loud noise and saw heavy smoke coming out of Wang’s room.

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Recessionista Charm School - UsMagazine.com

December 14th, 2011

The Jules Smith Vintage Charm School Jellies are available for $58.00 for a set of eight and $12.00 for a set of two at Jules Smith Designs. Other celebrity fans include Lindsay Lohan, AnnaLynne McCord, Selena Gomez and Miley Cyrus.

Twilight star Kristen Stewart’s new accessory? It’s hotter than R-Pattz! Anything that Kristen Stewart seems to touch turns golden or into a huge trend. Take Jules Smith’s Vintage Charm School Jellies or black rubber bracelets with mini charms. She’s been wearing these bracelets in two movies, Adventureland and the upcoming New Moon.

Buy it here.

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