China Gift
Department of State Washington File: Commerce Dept. Rules China Dumped Gift Boxes on U.S. Market A July 31 Commerce fact sheet listed the following calculations for company-by-company gift boxes dumping duty margins, which show how much the fair value price exceeds the dumped price. ... Washington -- The Department of Commerce has made a preliminary determination that imports of certain folding gift boxes from China have been dumped on the U.S. market. ... Commerce Dept. Rules China Dumped Gift Boxes on U.S. Market ... [Read More]
Department of State Washington File: Text: U.S.-China WTO Agreement Will Help Promote Reform in China -- Li Ke, Former Chinese Editor of the Democratic Journal Fangfa: "For so many years of China's reform and opening, these areas couldn't be opened up and remained state monopolies. But if economic monopolies can be broken, controls in other areas can have breakthroughs as well. These breakthroughs won't necessarily happen soon. But in the final analysis, in the minds of ordinary people, it will show that breakthroughs that were impossible in the past are indeed possible." China's upcoming entry into the WTO is "a New Year's gift for China as it enters 2000. It's a gift we never, ever thought we could get." [Washington Post, 11/18/99] ... [Read More]
Washington HyperFile - East Asia/Pacific Edition 505 Commerce Dept. Rules China Dumped Gift Boxes on U.S. Market ... [Read More]
Washington HyperFile - East Asia/Pacific Edition Commerce Dept. Rules China Dumped Gift Boxes on U.S. Market ... [Read More]
Department of State Washington File: Text: Senators Roth/Moynihan Introduce China Trade Bill March 23 "If we fail to pass permanent NTR," Roth warned, "then every member economy of the World Trade Organization will gain such access except the United States. Our European, Japanese and Asian competitors could not hope for a more lucrative gift, and all at the expense of our farmers and workers." ... If we fail to pass PNTR, then every member economy of the World Trade Organization will gain such access except the United States. Our European, Japanese and Asian competitors could not hope for a more lucrative gift, and all at the expense of our farmers and workers. ... [Read More]
Department of State Washington File: Transcript: President Clinton on U.S.-China Trade Relations In other words, we must continue to defend our interests and our ideals with candor and consistency. But we can't do that by isolating China from the very forces most likely to change it. Doing so would be a gift to the hard-liners in China's government, who don't want their country to be part of the world -- the same people willing to settle differences with Taiwan by force; the same people most threatened by our alliance with Japan and Korea; the same people who want to keep the Chinese military selling dangerous technologies around the world; the same people whose first instinct in the face of opposition is to throw people in prison. If we want to strengthen their hand within China, we should reject the China-WTO agreement. ... [Read More]
Department of State Washington File: Text: Senator Says Failure to Grant PNTR Would Hurt Reform Efforts In fact, if we refuse to grant PNTR status to China or oppose its admission to the WTO, we will have delivered an enormous setback to the Chinese reformers and entrepreneurs who have been the driving force for the positive political and economic changes that have occurred in China over the last twenty years. We will also have given an enormous gift to our economic competitors in Europe and Asia by giving them a foothold in perhaps the most important emerging market in the global economy of the 21st century--a foothold that will be difficult for our own Nation to regain. American jobs would be the ones that suffer and American workers the ones who pay the price. ... [Read More]
U.S. Department of State - Washington Hyper File 414 USITC Votes for Antidumping Duties on Gift Boxes from China ... [Read More]
USIS Washington File: TRANSCRIPT: PRESIDENT CLINTON REMARKS AT BEIJING UNIVERSITY In the 21st century, your generation will have a remarkable opportunity to bring together the talents of our scientists, doctors, engineers into a shared quest for progress. Already the breakthroughs we have achieved in our areas of joint cooperation -- in challenges from dealing with spina bifida to dealing with extreme weather conditions and earthquakes -- have proved what we can do together to change the lives of millions of people in China and the United States and around the world. Expanding our cooperation in science and technology can be one of our greatest gifts to the future. ... [Read More]
Department of State Washington File: Text: Hyde -- Good U.S.-China Relations Require Clarity, Directness But we cannot allow our hopes to displace sober analysis. Good relations will not be handed to us as a gift or as a reward for virtue. They are something that we must construct ourselves, by conscious choice from the options before us. ... [Read More]
|