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China says US has 'responsibility' to resolve debt ceiling row

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China says US has 'responsibility' to resolve debt ceiling row

Vice-finance minister Zhu Guangyao outlines concern over 'safety of Chinese investments in the United States'

Dominic Rushe in New York
The Guardian, Monday 7 October 2013 16.42 BST

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Treasury secretary Jack Lew appears on NBC's Meet the Press. Photograph: Reuters

A senior Chinese government official on Monday publicly warned Washington about the dangers of the current row over the US’s debt ceiling.

In the Chinese government's first public comments on the deadlock Zhu Guangyao, the vice-finance minister, told reporters in Beijing: “The United States is totally clear about China's concerns about the fiscal cliff. We ask that the United States earnestly takes steps to resolve in a timely way before 17 October the political [issues] around the debt ceiling and prevent a US debt default to ensure safety of Chinese investments in the United States and the global economic recovery. This is the United States' responsibility.”

China is the largest foreign holder of US debt, owning about $1.277tn of US Treasury bonds at the end of July, according to the Treasury. For bond holders, economists and other investors, the row over the debt ceiling is likely to have a far greater impact than the current government shutdown.

The US Treasury secretary, Jack Lew, warned again on Sunday that by 17 October the US will be left with about $30bn in cash to meet its obligations – which are about $60bn a day – unless Congress acts soon to increase the US’s borrowing limit. “Congress is playing with fire,” Lew told CNN”s State of the Union. “If the United States government, for the first time in its history, chooses not to pay its bills on time, we will be in default. There is no option that prevents us from being in default if we don’t have enough cash to pay our bills.”

Republican House Speaker John Boehner said at the weekend that his colleagues would not agree to raise the debt ceiling unless any deal included measures to rein in public spending. President Barack Obama has accused Republicans of “blackmail” in their attempts to kill his healthcare reforms, known as Obamacare.

Zhu said China and the US were "inseparable". "The executive branch of the US government has to take decisive and credible steps to avoid a default on its Treasury bonds," he said. "It is important for the US economy as well as the global economy."

"We hope the United States fully understands the lessons of history," Zhu added, referring to a similar row over the debt ceiling in 2011 that led to a historic downgrade of the US's AAA credit rating and panic on stock markets worldwide.

Zhu’s comments came as US stock markets fell following the continued impasse over the shutdown and debt ceiling over the weekend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down over 125 points (0.84%) in morning trading and is down 378.51 points or 2.45% over the last two weeks.

 
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