U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo will travel to China next week for meetings with senior Chinese government officials and U.S. business leaders, the department said on Tuesday.
Last month, Raimondo vowed to go forward with the visit despite the reported Chinese hacking of her department's emails.
Raimondo "looks forward to constructive discussions," during the visit to Beijing and Shanghai from Aug. 27 to 30, the department said in a statement.
The talks would cover issues related to the U.S.- China commercial ties, challenges faced by U.S. businesses, and areas for potential cooperation, it added.
Last week, China said it welcomed Raimondo's expected visit.
Raimondo said recently that she wanted to raise with China "really serious concerns about the way they are targeting U.S. tech companies, about the way they do not respect intellectual property but also try to find lanes of commerce."
Her trip follows a four-day visit last month by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who held more than 10 hours of meetings with senior officials in Beijing.
The United States and China agreed this month to approve twice the number of passenger flights now permitted by air carriers between the two countries, in a rare sign of co-operation between the world's two largest economies.
Raimondo was among a group of senior U.S. officials whose emails were hacked this year by a group Microsoft said was based in China, according to a person briefed on the matter.
Earlier, China's embassy in Washington said that identifying the source of cyber attacks was complex and warned against groundless speculations and accusations.
In July, Raimondo said the Biden administration was seeking to carefully target U.S. controls on exports to China.
Raimondo met Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao in May, discussing trade, investment and export policies in what was until then the first U.S.-China cabinet-level exchange in months, after a string of trade and national security irritants derailed plans for re-engagement.
In April, Raimondo warned Chinese cloud companies could pose threats. Some Republican senators want her to add such companies to the entity list that imposes U.S. export controls on foreign companies.