Yellen finds her voice in China


US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen departed Beijing on Sunday after several days of talks with Chinese officials that she called “direct, substantive and productive.”

Yellen’s visit comes as the Biden Administration struggles to balance its economic policy toward China rhetorically:

  • 💔 China hawks have called for ‘decoupling’ – a total divorce from Chinese supply chains
  • 🤨 Others, including National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, have described the US approach as ‘de-risking’ the US economy’s exposure to China
  • 🗺️ But Yellen, who warned earlier this year that “a full separation of our economies would be disastrous for both countries,” used a third d-word during her trip, saying the US wants to “diversify its critical supply chains.

Intrigue’s take: From a Chinese perspective, it probably doesn’t matter which word the US chooses if it continues to impose trade tariffs and technology bans against China and goes through with plans to introduce new restrictions on American investment in Chinese defence technology.

The good news is that Yellen spent more than 10 hours in meetings getting to know China’s new economic leaders.

And it seems she made quite an impression; the Global Times (the Chinese Communist Party’s famously strident tabloid) reported that Chinese Premier Li Qiang said, “China-US ties can see ‘rainbows’ after a round of ‘wind and rain’”.

Also worth noting:

Latest Author Articles
Election Intrigue – What is Kamala Harris’s foreign policy?

Vice President Kamala Harris has been the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee for a whopping… checks notes… five days. We weren’t alive in 1968 when President Lyndon Johnson chose not to run again, but from the accounts of those closest to Johnson, it was a more orderly process.

26 July, 2024
Five geopolitical vibes at the Paris Olympics

As 10,500 athletes from 200 countries and regions head to Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics, the organisers really really want the world’s largest sporting event to be free of politics and geopolitics.

23 July, 2024
The six top lines from China’s ‘Third Plenum’

It’s been a summit-packed week. Between America’s GOP program in Milwaukee, the Brits cosying up to Europe at Blenheim Palace, and Japan hosting 18 Pacific Islands in Tokyo, China’s own Third Plenum almost took a backseat. Almost.

19 July, 2024
Mohammed Deif: dead or alive?

You might’ve noticed an Israeli Defence Force (IDF) tweet on Saturday regarding an airstrike on a “compound” in southern Gaza, where it said “two senior Hamas terrorists and additional terrorists hid among civilians”.

16 July, 2024