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China suspends tariff hikes on $126B of U.S. cars, auto parts

- BY JOE MCDONALD

China announced a 90-day suspension on Friday of tariff hikes on $126 billion of U.S. cars, trucks and auto parts following its cease-fire in a trade battle with Washington that threatens global economic growth.

The suspension is China’s first step in response to President Donald Trump’s Dec. 1 agreement to suspend U.S. tariff hikes for a similar 90-day period while the two sides negotiate over American complaints about Beijing’s technology policy and trade surplus.

China has indicated it plans to move ahead with the talks despite strains over the arrest of a Chinese technology executive in Canada to face possible U.S. charges related to a violation of trade sanctions on Iran.

Beijing will suspend a 25 per cent import charge on $66 billion of cars and trucks and a 5 per cent charge on $60 billion of auto parts, effective Jan. 1, the Finance Ministry announced.

The announceme­nt helped give substance to Trump’s agreement with his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, after prolonged uncertaint­y caused jittery global financial markets to swing wildly. The Chinese penalties were imposed in response to Trump’s decision to slap 25 per cent tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese goods and a 10 per cent charge on another $200 billion. The second tariff was due to rise Jan. 1 until Trump agreed to the postponeme­nt.

The United States and other trading partners complain that Beijing steals or pressures companies to hand over technology in violation of its market-opening obligation­s. American officials also worry Chinese industry plans that call for state-led creation of global champions in robotics and other fields threaten U.S. industrial leadership.

A spokesman for China’s Commerce Ministry, Gao Feng, said Thursday the two sides were in “close contact” but gave no timetable for possible face-to-face negotiatio­ns. Economists say 90 days probably is too little time to resolve conflicts that have bedeviled U.S.Chinese relations for years. They say Beijing’s goal probably will be to show it is making progress so Trump extends his deadline.

Beijing officials expressed confidence China could withstand U.S. pressure but the fight battered consumer confidence and threatened export industries that support millions of jobs. Friday’s announceme­nt “shows the Chinese government is willing to solve trade disputes through consultati­on based on equality,” said Song Lifang, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this file photo from earlier this year, the container ship Maersk Emerald is unloaded at the Port of Oakland, Calif.
AP PHOTO In this file photo from earlier this year, the container ship Maersk Emerald is unloaded at the Port of Oakland, Calif.

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