The Phnom Penh Post

US, China agree to abandon escalating trade war: Beijing

- Brian Knowlton and Ryan McMorrow

WA S H I N G T O N and Beijing have agreed to abandon any trade war and back off from imposing tariffs on each other, Chinese state media reported on Sunday.

The announceme­nt came after high-level talks in the US capital and followed months of tensions over what President Donald Trump has blasted as an unfair commercial relationsh­ip between the two economic giants.

Vice Premier Liu He, who led Chinese negotiator­s in Washington, said: “The two sides reached a consensus, will not fight a trade war, and will stop increasing tariffs on each other,” state-run news agency Xinhua reported on Sunday.

Liu called the agreement a “necessity”, but added: “At the same time it must be realised that unfreezing the ice cannot be done in a day, solving the structural problems of the economic and trade r el at i ons b e t w e e n the two countries will take time.”

An earlier joint statement issued in Washington said B e i j i n g w o u l d “s i g n i f i - c a n t l y ” i n c r e a s e its purchases of American goods, but offered few details.

The apparent detente comes after months of increasing tensions that have set markets on edge over fears of a damaging trade war.

Trump has repeatedly railed against his country’s trade deficit with China, describing it as a danger to US national security and threatenin­g to impose tar- iffs on billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese goods.

US levies on $50 billion of Chinese imports could have come into effect as early as next week.

The talks in Washington were between delegation­s led by US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Liu, who also met on Thursday with Trump. The sides had met earlier in Beijing.

“Therewas a consensus on taking effective m e a s u r e s to substantia­lly reduce the United States trade deficit in goods with China,” the joint statement said.

“To meet the growing c o n s u m p - tion needs of the Chinese people and the need for high-quality economic developmen­t, China will significan­tly increase purchases of United States goods and services.”

‘Meaningful increases’

Last year, the United States had a $375.2 billion trade deficit with China, with populist politician­s blaming the Asian powerhouse for the leeching of American jobs over the last few decades.

Washington had reportedly demanded the deficit be slashed by at least $200 billion by 2020.

However, the joint statement held no indication that China had assented to that target.

It said both sides had agreed on “meaningful increases” in US agricultur­e and energy exports. Liu said the new trade cooperatio­n would extend to medical care, high-tech products, and finance, according to Xinhua.

They also agreed to strengthen cooperatio­n on protecting intellectu­al property – a long-standing source of US discontent.

The two countries, their economies enormously interlinke­d, opened the delicate negotiatio­ns a few weeks ago.

Trump had threatened China with tariffs on up to $150 billion of imports, prompting Beijing to warn it would target US agricultur­al exports, aircraft, and even whiskey.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia