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US President Joe Biden speaks at the George E. Wahlen Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centre in Salt Lake City on Thursday. Photo: AP

Joe Biden calls China ‘ticking time bomb’ due to economic troubles

  • The US president says the Asian giant is ‘in trouble’ because of weak growth, and when ‘bad folks have problems, they do bad things’
  • The comments are some of the most alarming yet that Biden has made about the US’s chief geopolitical rival

US President Joe Biden on Thursday called China a “ticking time bomb” because of its economic challenges and said the country was in trouble because of weak growth.

“They have got some problems. That’s not good because when bad folks have problems, they do bad things,” Biden said at a political fundraiser in Utah.

Biden’s remarks were reminiscent of comments he made at another fundraiser in June when he referred to President Xi Jinping as a “dictator.”

China called the remarks a provocation.

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US President Biden defends calling Chinese leader Xi Jinping a ‘dictator’

US President Biden defends calling Chinese leader Xi Jinping a ‘dictator’

Those comments came soon after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken completed a visit to China aimed at stabilising relations that Beijing described as being at their lowest point since formal ties were established in 1979.

China’s consumer sector fell into deflation and factory-gate prices extended declines in July.

China may be entering an era of much slower economic growth with stagnated consumer prices and wages, contrasting with inflation elsewhere in the world.

The United States, the world’s largest economy, has fought high inflation and seen a robust labour market.

US tech curbs target Chinese companies, but bilateral ties also set to suffer

“China is in trouble,” Biden said on Thursday. He said he did not want to hurt China and wanted a rational relationship with the country.

Biden on Wednesday signed an executive order that will prohibit some new US investment in China in sensitive technologies like computer chips.

China, which has the world’s second largest economy, said it was “gravely concerned” about the order and reserved the right to take measures.

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