By Laurie Chen and Andy Bruce BEIJING (Reuters) -British finance minister Rachel Reeves, facing criticism for travelling to ...
British finance minister Rachel Reeves began a visit to China on Saturday, seeking to revive dialogue with the world's number ...
Britain’s Treasury chief is travelling to China this weekend to discuss economic and financial cooperation between the ...
With the trip publicly known, cancelling it would have been seen as a sign of panic with comparisons inevitably drawn with Denis Healey in 1976 with the then Chancellor turning back at Heathrow – ...
She went on: “Choosing not to engage with China is therefore no choice at all. The UK must engage confidently with China in ...
Chancellor defends decision to travel to Beijing where she is seeking to revive relations that have been frozen since 2019 ...
Chatham House said a formal deal would enable ‘bolder and more confident engagement’ by the UK in China ‘and vice versa’.
British finance minister Rachel Reeves will begin a visit to China on Saturday, seeking to revive dialogue with the world's number two economy in the shadow of financial tumult back home.
The Treasury said a stable relationship with China would support economic growth - but critics said the chancellor should have stayed at home to address the market turmoil.
BEIJING -- Chinese Vice-President Han Zheng on Saturday met with British Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves, who is in ...
Rachel Reeves has said the UK has "no choice" but to engage "confidently" with China, as she arrived in Beijing to begin what ...