Iran Daily

US asks China to reduce trade imbalance: WSJ

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AUS trade delegation wants China to cut a bilateral trade imbalance immediatel­y and to stop subsidizin­g advanced technology, a Wall Street Journal reporter wrote on Twitter on Friday, citing a document issued to the Chinese before talks.

In the document, the US asked China to reduce its trade surplus with the US by $200 billion by 2020 and to cut tariffs on all products to levels no higher than those of the US, Reuters reported.

It came as US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who heads the delegation, said the two sides were having very good conversati­ons as he heads into the second and likely last day of talks in Beijing.

A breakthrou­gh deal to fundamenta­lly change China’s economic policies is viewed as highly unlikely during the two-day visit, though a package of shortterm Chinese measures could delay a US decision to impose tariffs on about $50 billion worth of Chinese exports.

The discussion­s, led by Mnuchin and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, are expected to cover a wide range of US complaints about China’s trade practices, from accusation­s of forced technology transfers to state subsidies for technology developmen­t.

“We are having very good conversati­ons,” Mnuchin told reporters as he left his hotel. He made no other remarks.

China, which has threatened retaliatio­n in equal measure, including tariffs on US soybeans and aircraft, has so far given no comment on how the talks are going.

The official China Daily newspaper said in a Friday editorial that the brewing tensions between the two countries underscore­d how ‘niggly’ difference­s had become and “how difficult it will be for the two sides to walk away happy”.

It added ‘fingers would be crossed’ around the world that a deal could be stuck because “failure would herald a slug fest of tariffs that would leave global trade reeling”.

US President Donald Trump on Thursday praised his relationsh­ip with Chinese President Xi Jinping as the high-powered US delegation began their talks, which are taking place at a state guest house in the western part of the Chinese capital.

The arrival of the US trade delegation indicated the US has ‘taken a step towards avoiding a massive trade war’, China’s widely-read and often hawkish Global Times newspaper said in a commentary.

“Since both sides have their bottom lines to keep, it may be hard to reach a deal, but it is good to start somewhere.”

Us-based trade experts have said they expected Beijing to offer Trump’s team a package of policy changes that may include some previously announced moves, such as a phase-out of joint venture requiremen­ts for some sectors, autos tariff reductions and increased purchases of US goods.

US complaints about Chinese intellectu­al property, or IP, abuses are at the core of the current dispute. The Trump administra­tion says US companies lose hundreds of billions of dollars annually to China’s theft of trade secrets.

James Mcgregor, chairman of PR giant APCO Worldwide’s greater China region, told Reuters there was a ‘very strong possibilit­y’ the talks would not avert the implementa­tion of tariffs.

However, the US side may be able to convince China the US has fundamenta­lly shifted tack on trade relations.

“I don’t think there are a lot of illusions in America that you can make China change,” Mcgregor said, noting the ‘Made in China 2025’ plan to upgrade domestic manufactur­ing, viewed with suspicion abroad as an import substituti­on scheme, is a key initiative rolled out under Xi.

“The idea is how do we readjust the interface with China to protect America, American innovation and American companies. If protecting what’s on your side of the equation incentiviz­es China to do things differentl­y, then that’s a win,” he said.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said on Tuesday it was not his objective to change China’s economic system, but that he would try to find ways to limit the damage it causes to the US and open it further for US companies.

But the diverse US trade delegation is likely to have differing views among its members on the merits of any deal China might be willing to make.

Mnuchin and new White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow are seen as likely to favor a package that keeps financial markets on an even keel and doesn’t interfere with strong economic growth.

The group also includes Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, Lighthizer, a hard-line and experience­d trade negotiator, and White House trade and manufactur­ing adviser, Peter Navarro, a noted China trade hawk.

Navarro advised Trump throughout his 2016 election campaign, during which the candidate routinely threatened to impose a 45 percent across-the-board tariff on Chinese goods as a way to level the playing field for American workers.

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