The Phnom Penh Post

US, China agree to lower trade deficit

- Heather Scott

THE United States and China have agreed to cooperate on reducing the trade deficit in the first round of economic talks under the Trump administra­tion, Washington said at the conclusion of the meeting on Wednesday which produced no major breakthrou­ghs.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had opened the talks between the world’s top two economies with tough demands for a more “fair, equitable and reciprocal” relationsh­ip, with more access for American-made goods and services.

The US side blamed the unbalanced relationsh­ip – marked by a trade deficit with China of $309 billion last year – on Beijing’s policies that impede access to their market. China says Washington’s own rules restrictin­g US high-tech exports are partially to blame.

But Ross and Mnuchin took a more measured tone in a statement following the conclusion of the talks with the Chinese delegation, led by Vice Premier Wang Yang.

“China acknowledg­ed our shared objective to reduce the trade deficit which both sides will work cooperativ­ely to achieve,” the two officials said in a joint statement.

“The principles of balance, fairness, and reciprocit­y on matters of trade will continue to guide the American position so we can give American workers and businesses an opportunit­y to compete on a level playing field.”

In his remarks at the one-day meeting’s opening ceremony, Ross had insisted change was necessary given the more than 200 percent surge in Chinese exports to the United States in the last 15 years.

“If this were just the natural product of free market forces, we could understand it, but it’s not,” Ross said.

“So it is time to rebalance our trade and investment relationsh­ip in a more fair, equitable and reciprocal manner.”

The tough talk seemed like a return to Trump’s message during his campaign, when he attacked Beijing for unfair trade practices. However, a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at his Florida resort in April had prompted a change of rhetoric and the launch of a 100-day economic cooperatio­n plan.

That led to specific but narrow achievemen­ts, including opening the Chinese market to US beef exports, and pledges to remove barriers to US credit card transactio­ns, credit ratings, and other financial s e r v i c e s , including bond underwriti­ng.

The discussion mechanism is a continuati­on of regular talks undertaken by the previous two administra­tions, which the Trump administra­tion has rebranded as the US-China Comprehens­ive Economic Dialogue.

Ross said China accounts for half of the US goods trade deficit and Mnuchin said Beijing must address “the imbalances caused by the Chinese interventi­on in its economy.”

Mnuchin said the talks with Wang would focus on concrete steps to provide greater access and a “level playing field” for US companies in the world’s second-largest market.

Improving US-China trade in turn “will create prosperity for our two countries and the world”, he said.

But China experts were skeptical the talks would make headway in the near term, and cautioned the US goals may be over-ambitious.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia