UPDATE 8-US Commerce chief leaves China on upbeat note after 'uninvestible' remark

In This Article:

(Adds more comments from press conference)

By David Shepardson

SHANGHAI, Aug 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo talked up American firms' desire to do business in China and her hopes for further engagement with Chinese officials on market access on Wednesday, after earlier comments over China being "uninvestible."

At a press conference in Shanghai, Raimondo said she had not expected any breakthroughs on issues affecting U.S. firms such as Intel, Micron, Boeing, Visa and Mastercard in her first meetings with Chinese officials, but did hope to "see some results" in the next few months as a result of her four-day visit to Beijing and Shanghai.

Raimondo said there was strong appetite among U.S. businesses to make the relationship work and that, while some actions of the Chinese government have been positive, the situation on the ground needed to match the rhetoric.

"There is appetite among U.S. business to continue to do business (in China). The market is enormous," she said. "U.S. businesses want to do business here but they need to have a predictable regulatory environment."

The commerce secretary is the latest Biden administration official to visit China in a bid to strengthen communications, particularly on economics and defence, amid concern that friction between the two superpower could spiral out of control.

Raimondo insists the U.S. does not want to decouple from China. "I am leaving with some optimism," Raimondo said of agreements to continue dialogue on a lot of tough issues. "We can't drift to a place of greater of conflict. It's not good for the U.S., it's not good for China, it's not good for the world."

On Tuesday she had told reporters on a high-speed train to Shanghai from Beijing that American companies had complained to her that China has become "uninvestible," pointing to fines, raids and other actions that have made it risky to do business in the world's second-largest economy.

On Wednesday she said: "For U.S. business in many cases patience is running thin and it's time for action."

Raimondo said she had raised with Chinese officials that her emails had been hacked and said that was an "action that erodes trust." Reuters reported in July that Raimondo was among a group of U.S. officials whose emails were hacked earlier this year by a group Microsoft says is based in China.

Her comment on the difficulties U.S. businesses face has shone a harsh light on trade and investment flows between the geopolitical rivals.