He encouraged maintaining cultural diversity and said the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is a way to keep different cultures vital.
He had also written a letter outlining plans to attack the home, claiming "disabled people only create unhappiness".
He made the remarks after Nasdaq said on Friday it will remove shares of four Chinese construction and manufacturing companies from indexes it maintains in response to a US order restricting the purchase of their shares.
He hoped that China and the Philippines would properly deal with their differences and increase the friendship between the two peoples, building a closer China-ASEAN community of shared future.
He noted there are four dimensions of data on small and microenterprises: data acquired by financial institutions via offline channels; online big data; data provided by government institutions in areas such areas as taxation, industry and commerce, social security, poverty alleviation and subsidies; as well as data collected from communities in rural and urban areas.
He draws encouragement from the Belt and Road Initiative, which he said presents huge opportunities for the likes of TE that provide connectivity products and sensors to sectors like energy, infrastructure, railway and information technology.
重庆优化排名
He called on the two nations to advance high-level exchanges, to strengthen exchanges between the two governments, legislative bodies, political parties, local areas and nongovernmental bodies, and to deepen political mutual trust.
He made the comments at a press conference during the ongoing first session of the 13th National People's Congress.
He has been a policy director for the House Armed Services Committee and worked in the George W. Bush administration as deputy assistant secretary of defense for negotiations policy, where he was responsible for nonproliferation, arms control and international security issues. Esper was a director for national security affairs at the Senate from 2004 to 2006. He was executive vice-president at the Aerospace Industries Association and later served as national policy director in Senator Fred Thompson's 2008 presidential campaign.
He compared the difference between the brand's perception in China and what it is globally to a veil covering Hyundai.