[华尔街日报亚洲版].WSJA-080910-A-COMPLETE.pdf
《[华尔街日报亚洲版].WSJA-080910-A-COMPLETE.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《[华尔街日报亚洲版].WSJA-080910-A-COMPLETE.pdf(32页珍藏版)》请在三一文库上搜索。
1、VOL. XXXVNO. 6Wednesday, September 8, 2010 ASIA Asof12p.m.ETDJIA 10365.74 g 0.79% FTSE100 5407.82 g 0.58%Nikkei225 9226.00 g 0.81%ShanghaiComp. 2698.36 0.08% HangSeng 21401.79 0.22%Sensex 18645.06 0.46% S sales of men s im- portedwalletshavemore than doubled. “Given the economy and the new price tra
2、nsparency, while the Japan premium will not go away, it will be diffi- cult to maintain going for- ward,” Brian Salsberg, a prin- cipal at consultant McKinsey Beijing: 86-10 6581 4090; Shanghai: 86-21 5836 8228; Indonesia: 62-21 527 7592; Japan:81-3 6269-2760;Korea:82-2 756 1695; Malaysia: 60-3 2026
3、 4061; Philippines: 63-2 848 5873; Singapore:65-6415 4000;Thailand: 66-2 652 0871; India: 91-11 6462 0215. Or email: servicewsj- ADVERTISING SALES worldwide through Dow Jones International. Hong Kong: 852-2831 2504; Singapore: 65-6415 4300; Tokyo: 81-3 6269-2701; Frankfurt: 49 69 29725390; London: 4
4、4 207 842 9600; Paris: 33 1 40 17 17 01; New York: 1-212 659 2176. Or email: Trademarks appearing herein are used under license from Dow Jones Singapore 6415 4000;Japan 0120-440-971;India 1800-102-4783 Influencing Asias Influential. 4THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.Wednesday, September 8, 2010 WORLD NEWS:
5、ASIA China hits positive note in U.S. talks BEIJINGChinese leaders accen- tuated the positive in the U.S.-China relationship in meetings with visit- ing White House officials, signaling Beijing s concern that tensions over currency and other issues are again threatening ties between the world s two
6、key economies. China and the U.S. “should not regard each other as rivals,” Pre- mier Wen Jiabao said Tuesday in a meeting with U.S. National Eco- nomic Council Director Lawrence Summers and Deputy National Secu- rity Adviser Thomas Donilon. “Cur- rently the mainstay of China-U.S. re- lations is dia
7、logue and cooperation. The two countries should overcome disturbanceandmoveforward firmly.” Mr. Summers and Mr. Donilon arrived Sunday for a series of meet- ings with senior Chinese officials that end Wednesday. The trip marks the start of several months of high- level U.S.-China diplomacy, includ-
8、ing expected visits by Mr. Wen and Chinese President Hu Jintao to the U.S. The officials have a range of thorny issues to deal with, from U.S. frustration over China s currency policy to Chinese anger over U.S. in- volvement in the South China Sea. Economic and trade issues could come to a head soon
9、 with U.S. con- gressional hearings on China s cur- rency policies next week and mid- termelectionsloomingin November. Vice Premier Wang Qishan, in a separate meeting Tuesday, said the U.S. and China should “avoid politi- cizing economic matters.” China and the U.S. “should strengthen under- standin
10、g and mutual trust through dialogue and communication,” Mr. Wang told the U.S. officials, accord- ing to a Chinese government state- ment. Yet there is increasing frustra- tion in Washington that the Chinese yuanhasrisenlessthan0.6% against the dollar since Beijing s an- nouncement in June that the
11、ex- change rate would be more flexible. And with lawmakers gearing up for U.S. midterm elections in No- vember, observers think it is in- creasingly likely that Congress will push for legislation to penalize China for tightly controlling its cur- rency. “On currency, the risks of leg- islation are d
12、efinitely rising,” John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council, said in an inter- view Friday. Chinese officials have consis- tently said that they won t change key economic policies because of foreign pressure, and argued that the exchange rate has little bearing on the U.S. trade im
13、balance with China. “Our exchange-rate reform can t be pressed ahead under exter- nalpressure,”ForeignMinistry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a regular press briefing Tuesday. But senior Chinese officials have tried to address growing complaints by foreign businesses recently that they are facing grea
14、ter discrimina- tion and barriers to entry in China. Vice President Xi Jinping, speak- ing at a southeastern China forum Tuesday, said foreign companies won t face discrimination in govern- mentprocurementaparticular concern of U.S. and European busi- nesses recently. China “will adopt an open and t
15、ransparent plan to let foreign companies and technological products enjoy equal treatment” in government purchases and con- struction projects, he said. On Monday, China s deputy inter- national trade representative, Chong Quan, said Beijing will encourage more imports to narrow its trade surplus. T
16、rade officials have made similar comments before, and it is unclear how the government will follow through. China s monthly trade surplus in July was the largest since January 2009. Some economists expect the surplus will continue to widen to about $30 billion in August. Al- though the U.S. is China
17、 s second- largest trade partner following the European Union, China s trade sur- plus with the U.S. accounted for two-thirds of July s total surplus. “China certainly won t meet the U.S. demands on yuan appreciation,” said Chen Fengying of the China In- stitutes of Contemporary Interna- tional Rela
18、tions, a government think tank in Beijing. “China will make some promises in opening up its market, but the U.S. will still be un- satisfied.” “Contradictions can t be avoided in the China-U.S. relationship, but the overall relationship won t be af- fected as the U.S. needs China,” Mr. Chen added. I
19、n addition to Mr. Wen and Mr. Wang, who is in charge of trade and financial policy, Mr. Summers and Mr. Donilon met with State Coun- cilor Dai Bingguo, a top foreign-pol- icy official, as well as Li Yuanchao, a member of the Communist Party s rulingPolitburo.Theyarealso scheduled to meet President H
20、u. The coming months will present several opportunities for leaders of the two nations to talk through the issues in the relationship. In about two weeks, Mr. Wen travels to New York for a meeting of the United Na- tionsGeneralAssembly,during which he is also likely to meet U.S. President Barack Oba
21、ma. November will see both at a bilateral meeting on U.S.-China trade issues, and the summit of the Group of 20 econo- mies in Seoul. And U.S. and Chinese officials are discussing a possible visit by Mr. Hu to Washington around January. Liu Li Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, right, meets U.S. National E
22、conomic Council Director Lawrence Summers in Beijing Tuesday. ZUMA U.S. presses Afghans for Kabul Bank probe KABULThe U.S. is pressing Af- ghan authorities to investigate alle- gations of financial improprieties at Afghanistan s largest bank, fearing that anything short of a thorough inquiry will fu
23、rther undermine Pres- ident Hamid Karzai s credibility. The Karzai administration has deep ties to Kabul Bank, which de- positors have thronged since last week, after news leaked that its two top executiveswho are also its two largest shareholdershad resigned and been replaced by a central-bank offi
24、cial. The president s brother is Kabul Bank s third-largest share- holder. Central bank Gov. Abdul Qadir Fitrat said Monday that the situa- tion at the lender was returning to normal, despite long lines and heavy security at many of its branches for a fifth day. Mr. Fitrat declined to say how much m
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 华尔街日报亚洲版 华尔街 日报 亚洲 WSJA 080910 COMPLETE
链接地址:https://www.31doc.com/p-3684008.html