Kuwait Times

Trump: US could extend March 1 China deadline

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said Friday the trade negotiatio­ns with China were going “extremely well” and again offered the possibilit­y of extending the March 1 deadline for a sharp rise in punitive tariffs.

Senior officials completed two days of high-stakes talks in Beijing on Friday as they try to avert the US threat to more than double tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese goods, which would be an unwelcome shock to the world’s second largest economy as it already has shown signs of slowing.

“It is going extremely well,” Trump said of the talks. “The tariffs are hurting China very badly. They don’t want them and frankly if we can make the deal it would be my honor to remove them,” he told reporters

at the White House.

The president confirmed his comments earlier this week that he might be willing to hold off on increasing tariffs to 25 percent from the current 10 percent, if Washington and Beijing are close to finalizing an agreement to deal with US complaints about unfair trade and theft of American technology.

“There is a possibilit­y that I will extend the date,” he told reporters. “If I see we’re close to a deal or the deal is going in the right direction, I would do that.”

After progress in the talks in Beijing, a fourth round of negotiatio­ns is scheduled for next week in Washington. Trump said he likes tariffs that are bringing “many billions of dollars pouring into our Treasury,” but continues to state that China is paying the duties, when in fact they are paid by US companies and ultimately by American consumers in the form of higher prices.

‘The vibe is good’

Chinese President Xi Jinping hailed the “important step-by-step progress,” and said he hoped the two delegation­s would continue to “work hard” for a “winwin”

agreement, according to China’s state news agency Xinhua. Wall Street was cheered by the talks’ optimistic tone, with the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average rising nearly 450 points or 1.7 percent, for its eighth consecutiv­e week of gains.

American officials accuse Beijing of seeking global industrial predominan­ce through an array of unfair trade practices, including the “theft” of American intellectu­al property and massive state interventi­on in commoditie­s markets.

Since a December detente, China has resumed purchases of some US soybeans and dangled massive buying of American commoditie­s to get US trade negotiator­s closer to a deal.

The talks have included discussion of purchases to reduce the “large and persistent bilateral trade deficit,” the White House said in a statement.

But many China experts say Beijing’s Communist Party rulers are unlikely to make significan­t changes to industrial policies without a long and tough fight.

Still, expectatio­ns for an accord have been growing as China faces pressure from slowing economic growth. “We all believe that China-US relations have broad common interests in safeguardi­ng world peace and stability and promoting global economic prosperity and developmen­t,” Xi told the US negotiator­s.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, who led the American delegation, told Xi on Friday that while there was more work to do, they had made progress.

Lighthizer and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and met with China’s top trade negotiator Liu He, Foreign Minister Wang Yi and central bank chief Yi Gang. Bloomberg News reported that the White House was considerin­g a 60-day deadline extension, but Trump did not offer any particular­s. Trump’s economic advisor Larry Kudlow said of the talks that “the vibe is good,” but there was no decision yet on extending the 90-day tariff truce.

The two sides last year exchanged tariffs on more than $360 billion in two-way trade.

China’s politicall­y sensitive trade surplus with the US last year hit a record $323 billion as tariffs kept Chinese buyers away from American agricultur­al and energy exports. Trump has said that any eventual trade deal would need to be sealed personally with Xi, though no date has been set for a meeting.

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