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China names its trade-deal price as Trump sets month deadline

In order to reach agreement US must remove all extra tariffs, Vice Premier Liu He says



Chinese Vice Premier Liu He departs the Office of the United States Trade Representative in Washington, on Friday, May 10, 2019.
Image Credit: AP

Beijing: China for the first time made clear what it wants to see from the US in talks to end their trade war, laying bare the deep differences that still exist between the two sides.

In a wide-ranging interview with Chinese media after talks in Washington ended Friday, Vice Premier Liu He said that in order to reach an agreement the US must remove all extra tariffs, set targets for Chinese purchases of goods in line with real demand, and ensure that the text of the deal is “balanced” to ensure the “dignity” of both nations.

Liu’s three conditions underscore the work still to be done if an accord is to be reached between the world’s two largest economies. President Donald Trump’s administration told China it has a month to seal a trade deal or face tariffs on all its exports to the US.

That threat was made during talks Friday in Washington, hours after Trump upped the ante by imposing a second round of punitive duties on $200 billion (Dh734 billion) in Chinese goods. The talks are under close scrutiny across global financial markets, and US stocks turned positive after negotiators on both sides said the session had gone fairly well.

Liu said both sides agreed to keep talking despite what he called “some temporary resistance and distractions,” and to hold future meetings in Beijing. He dismissed the idea that talks had broken down. “It’s normal to have hiccups during the negotiations. It’s inevitable.” China hasn’t yet detailed how it will retaliate to the latest increase in tariffs.

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Liu also struck a note of defiance. “For the interest of the people of China, the people of US and the people of the whole world, we will deal with this rationally,’ the vice premier said. “But China is not afraid, nor are the Chinese people,” adding that “China needs a cooperative agreement with equality and dignity.”

‘Candid and constructive’ talks

In a series of tweets that cheered markets, Trump declared Friday that the talks with China had been candid and constructive. “The relationship between President Xi and myself remains a very strong one, and conversations into the future will continue,” he said. Further talks are possible, but there’s no immediate plan for the next round, according to a person familiar with the negotiations.

Image Credit: Gulf News

Liu’s comments reveal a new fault line. Whereas US negotiators previously accused China of walking back on commitments to change laws on technology transfer and other issues, Liu argued that the US team is pushing for bigger Chinese purchases to level the trade imbalance than had originally been agreed.

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According to Liu, Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump had achieved an initial consensus “on a number” when they met in Argentina. That “is a very serious issue and can’t be changed easily.”

The amount of purchases by China should be “in line with reality,” according to a commentary by state news agency Xinhua on Saturday. China also sees the removal of all the extra tariffs that have been imposed since last year as a precondition to a deal, whereas US negotiators see retention of some duties as a key mechanism to enforce a deal.

In a statement late Friday, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said the administration would release details of its plans for tariffs on roughly $300 billion in imports from China on Monday, setting the process in motion for Trump to deliver on his latest threat.

The lack of progress left major question-marks hanging over the search for a deal on trade — just one source of tensions in a growing geopolitical rivalry that’s already shifting supply chains and testing established economic and security alliances.

Trump, who is seeking re-election on the back of a booming US economy, sought to justify his decision to hike tariffs as well as to convince businesses and financial markets that he wasn’t walking away from a deal.

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No Rush

“There is absolutely no need to rush,” the US president said. In another tweet, Trump proposed a vast new plan to use income from tariffs to buy up the crops of American farmers who’ve watched their exports to China collapse, and send them to poor countries as aid.

The presidential good humour hid what people familiar with the discussions say has been an increasingly gloomy mood around the negotiations in recent days.

Before the rebound late Friday, US markets had posted their worst week of the year, as the trade truce that had been in place for months was shattered by the new US tariffs. The S&P 500 recovered from earlier losses Friday, ending the day 0.4 per cent higher.

This week’s tariff move is likely to have significant short-term consequences for retailers and other US businesses reliant on imports from China. But extending it to all trade would increase the economic and political stakes even further for Trump and American businesses.

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Such a step would see price increases on smartphones, laptops and other consumer goods — the kind that Trump’s advisers have been eager to avoid, out of concern for the fallout. It would likely provoke further retaliation, and some economists are predicting it could even tip the US economy into recession just as Trump faces re-election in 2020.

‘Gets harder’

This week’s talks have also amplified the differences that remain between the two governments as they try to navigate their own domestic politics as well as a growing international rivalry.

Liu’s interview underlined the need for any agreement not to be seen as undermining Chinese sovereignty — as the US demand to change domestic laws surely would be.

The text “must be balanced” for the dignity of a country, Liu said, repeating China and the US are “trying to meet halfway” despite different views on some crucial issues.

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Securing a trade deal is likely to get harder from here unless outside factors, such as an economic downturn, force a compromise, according to Ely Ratner, a China expert who served in the administration of President Barack Obama and is now director of studies at the Centre for a New American Security think tank.

“The question is can the Chinese come back and offer enough such that Trump can sell it?” he said. “I think it is going to be hard for them to do that in the face of Trump escalating. I think it gets harder as this thing goes on, and it gets harder politically for Trump.”

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