U.S. Treasury’s Yellen Still Hopes To Visit China But No Time Set

U.S. Treasury's Yellen Still Hopes To Visit China But No Time Set

By David Lawder and Kanishka Singh

SPRING HILL, Tenn./ WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday she still hoped to visit China but offered no details on plans or timing.

A team of U.S. Treasury officials was scheduled to travel to China this month to prepare for a visit by Yellen but that was before a diplomatic row over a Chinese balloon Washington claims was spying on the United States. The United States shot down the balloon on Saturday.

China’s commerce ministry said at a regular news conference on Thursday it welcomes Yellen’s willingness to visit the country.

The United States held briefings in Washington and Beijing with foreign diplomats from 40 nations about the Chinese balloon. Its appearance over the United States last week caused political outrage in Washington and prompted Secretary of State Antony Blinken to cancel a trip to Beijing that both countries had hoped would patch their frayed relations. Blinken had been originally scheduled to arrive in Beijing this past Sunday.

Yellen, speaking to reporters on Wednesday, said it was important to improve communications with Chinese counterparts on economic issues.

“I still hope to be able to visit China to meet with economic counterparts. But I don’t have any detail to offer you on just when, and I really think that’s up to State (department) and DOD (Department of Defense),” Yellen said, noting she did meet with her Chinese counterpart in Zurich on the way to Africa.

A U.S. Air Force fighter jet shot down the balloon off the South Carolina coast on Saturday, a week after it first entered U.S. airspace. China’s foreign ministry has said it was a weather balloon that had blown off course and accused the United States of overreacting.

When Yellen met Chinese Vice Premier Liu He in January in Zurich, they both agreed to enhance communication about macroeconomic and financial issues.

Yellen also told reporters the risk of recession remained low, largely because of the strong job market.

“When you have a 3.4% unemployment rate, which is the lowest since 1969 and you have over 500,000 jobs created in January, this is not an economy that is anywhere near recession.”

(Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb and Joe Cash in Beijing; Writing by Kanishka Singh; Editing by Tim Ahmann, Diane Craft, Shri Navaratnam and Tom Hogue)