The Province

TRUMP SOFTENS CHINA STANCE

Drops plans to limit tech investment, open to talks

- PAUL WISEMAN, KEN THOMAS AND MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion de-escalated a confrontat­ion with China on Wednesday, dropping plans to impose strict limits on Chinese investment in U.S. technology companies and instead urging Congress to strengthen existing laws that apply to all foreign countries.

The administra­tion’s more conciliato­ry stance raised at least the possibilit­y that the two sides could work toward a negotiated end to the punishing tariffs that they’re set to impose on each other’s goods beginning July 6. And it fueled a rally in financial markets, which had been reeling on fears of an escalating trade war with China.

It was unclear whether the policy shift would lead to a cease-fire between the world’s two biggest economies, which have been edging toward a high-risk confrontat­ion, or whether any formal negotiatio­ns might soon begin. But the top White House economic adviser said the two sides are “in communicat­ion.” And analysts said they took heart that the Trump administra­tion had offered some semblance of an olive branch to Beijing.

“It seems like this move is being undertaken with the goal of coming to a resolution ultimately on the trade policy issues the U.S. has with China,” said Stephen Ezell, who manages global innovation policy at the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation think-tank .

Last month, the White House said that by the end of this week, it would announce tight new restrictio­ns on Chinese investment. The idea was to keep state-owned or politicall­y connected Chinese companies from buying advanced U.S. technology

 ?? — AP ?? President Donald Trump speaks yesterday at the White House.
— AP President Donald Trump speaks yesterday at the White House.

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