SOURCE / ECONOMY
US businesses won't exit from China despite tension: US advisor
Published: Jun 08, 2021 06:52 PM

A tourist visits the Bund during the Lunar New Year holiday in east China's Shanghai, Feb. 14, 2021. (Xinhua/Zhang Jiansong)

A tourist visits the Bund during the Lunar New Year holiday in east China's Shanghai, Feb. 14, 2021. (Xinhua/Zhang Jiansong)


 
US businesses will not exit the Chinese market though a White House official warned of the end of engagement with China, said Kenneth Jarrett, a senior advisor to the Albright Stonebridge Group in an interview, according to a Forbes article published Sunday.

Kurt Campbell, the White House's Indo-Pacific policy coordinator, said that "the period that was broadly described as engagement" with China "has come to an end" in an online discussion last month.

US businesses, nevertheless, won't exit from China and will continue to seek cooperation, according to Jarrett, who also served as the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai.

"It's important to understand that even within an overall dynamic of competition, there is still room for cooperation," Jarrett said, adding that US companies view commercial interactions between the United States and China as beneficial cooperation, which is not likely to change.

"The majority of US companies are successful in China and see that success as an important contributor to their global performance," said Jarrett. "They are not looking to exit the China market."