BEIJING (Reuters) - US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson 
on Thursday urged China to open its financial sector to foreign competition and 
said a critical challenge would be to hold back global trade protectionist 
forces. 
Paulson spoke to students at Tsinghua University in Beijing, using the forum 
to reiterate the U.S. call for more open Chinese capital markets and to warn 
that the possibility of trade action against China was real. 
The U.S. Treasury chief said freeing up financial markets was "absolutely 
necessary for long-term economic success" because it would allow more efficient 
investment and greater returns for China's rising savings. 
Paulson spoke a day after the United States and China announced a plan for 
regular high-level talks about their long-term economic relationship that U.S. 
officials said would not overshadow immediate concerns including the yuan 
exchange rate. 
The "strategic economic dialogue" was agreed by President George W. Bush and 
Chinese President Hu Jintao last month but only revealed as Paulson began a 
three-day visit to Beijing on Wednesday. He is to meet Hu on Friday before 
returning to the United States. 
But signs were evident already on Thursday that U.S. legislators remain 
unhappy at what they perceive to be an undervalued Chinese yuan, or renminbi, 
and that Chinese officials intend to proceed at their own pace toward letting it 
become more responsive to market forces. 
TROUBLE AT HOME 
Paulson hinted at the pressure he faces from U.S. lawmakers when he cautioned 
about the risk of trade barriers. 
"I think one of the biggest challenges will be to make the case in the United 
States and around the world for the benefits of trade, openness, because 
virtually everywhere in the world we have protectionist sentiment," he said. 
Some of that was unavoidable as China's booming economy and America's huge 
consumer markets tie the two countries more closely, he said, but added that 
each side must also take into account the positive impacts of stronger ties. 
"Global trade benefits all the countries that participate, and those that 
don't open themselves up to reform and change don't benefit and they get left 
behind," he said. 
One sponsor of a U.S. Senate bill, which proposes tariffs against Chinese 
imports unless the yuan is swiftly revalued, indicated he was not yet satisfied 
with China's actions. 
"We have had four years of talk," said Democratic Sen. 
Charles Schumer (news, bio, voting record) of New York. "Everyone knows the Chinese are flouting the rules. We 
need action." 
Paulson's call for China to open its financial markets comes as foreign banks 
are rushing into China, in part to tap the roughly $2 trillion in personal 
savings in the world's fourth-largest economy. 
Paulson said he sought "a long-term strategic view" of U.S. and Chinese 
relations that went beyond short-term irritants. 
But senators Schumer and Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, are 
threatening to put their tariff proposal up for a vote by September 29 before 
Congress adjourns for November congressional elections. 
Democrats seeking to wrest control of the U.S. House of Representatives and 
Senate from Republicans are expected to campaign hard on the issue of job losses 
and modest income gains for American workers, blaming the problems on unfairly 
cheap Chinese-made goods. 
Paulson said the issue of lost U.S. manufacturing jobs needed to be balanced 
against the benefits of cheaper goods for U.S. consumers. 
"There's more weight being given to the production side, to the jobs, and 
there's less credit to the benefit you guys (China) give, which is the ability 
to buy products for a lower cost."