The United States should not politicize its trade relations with China, Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said Tuesday.
The two countries should solve trade problems under the framework of the World Trade Organization, Li said.
Li made the remarks at a press conference held on the sideline of the ongoing annual full session of the Tenth National People's Congress, China's top legislature.
The trade between the two countries reached 211.6 billion U.S. dollars in 2005, up 24.8 percent year on year, Li said.
Refering to the trade imbalance between the two sides, Li noted that China does not pursue surplus in its trade with the United States, and it is "ready to take positive measures" to solve the problem.
However, Li said, the restriction on export items of the United States to China is to be partially blamed for U.S. deficit in its trade with China.
"Besides its Boeing planes, the United States only wants to sell its soybean, cotton and orange to China. For those more valuable items, it doesn't like to sell to us because it regards them as 'high-tech' products or as civilian-military goods," Li said.
The minister said China's export to the United States can help curb inflation and create four to eight million jobs in the country.
Also, consumers in the United States have benefited from the import of Chinese products, which are cheap but also in good quality, Li added.
The minister said China has become a fastest growing market for the U.S. export, adding that China is the largest importer of soybean and cotton of the United States.