The Borneo Post

US-China talks cover joint efforts on excess steel capacity

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WASHINGTON: Seeking a more positive spin on US-China economic talks viewed as ending in discord, China said that the two sides agreed to ‘active and effective measures’ to reduce global excess steel production capacity.

The statement issued a day after the talks by the Chinese embassy in Washington did not elaborate on the measures discussed by US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and Chinese Commerce Minister Zhong Shan on Wednesday.

“In this breakout session, the two sides focused their discussion on steel, aluminum and high-tech trade,” the embassy said in a statement.

“The two sides had in-depth discussion on cutting excess steel production capacity in the world and agreed to active and effective measures to jointly address this global issue.”

A US Commerce Department spokesman declined comment on the Chinese statement and referred Reuters to a joint statement from Ross and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

Their statement did not mention steel and cited only one point of consensus, a ‘shared objective’ to work towards reducing the US trade deficit with China.

Late on Wednesday, a Trump administra­tion official told Reuters that China had refused to agree to US demands that it eliminate excess steel capacity and take other steps to open its economy for foreign firms.

The first annual economic summit between the Trump administra­tion and their Chinese counterpar­ts ended with cancelled news conference­s, no joint statement and no new transactio­n announceme­nts.

The Chinese embassy statement also said China agreed to “deepen its cooperatio­n” with the United States on expanding trade in services. The two sides also will start work on a one-year economic cooperatio­n plan, determinin­g an “early harvest” as soon as possible.

Before the latest Chinese statement, US Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue announced that China would allow imports of US rice for the first time, agreeing to phytosanit­ary protocols.

The rocky dialogue session in Washington was a sharp contrast to US President Donald Trump’s rosy first meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at Trump’s Mar- A- Lago, Florida estate in April.

Both sides found each other harder to deal with than expected, China trade experts said.

The Trump team’s expectatio­ns that Beijing would agree to quick, substantia­l reforms to shrink the US trade deficit and eliminate excess steelmakin­g capacity were dashed, while China found that further minor steps and vague action plans would no longer placate the US side.

“There was a misalignme­nt of expectatio­ns. The Americans pushed for deliverabl­es, and the Chinese said no, everything is fine,” said Scott Miller, an Asia trade expert at the Center for Strategic and Economic Studies in Washington.

“These are difficult issues that don’t lend themselves toward easy boxes to check.”

Domestic politics contribute­d to both sides taking a tougher stance, said Eswar Prasad, a trade policy professor at Cornell University and former China division chief at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

China faces a once-in-five-years Communist Party congress to set new leadership this autumn, while Trump is keen to hold to campaign promises to help ailing US steel and coal industries and grow US manufactur­ing jobs.

Prasad said that China found that the Trump administra­tion is ‘no pushover’ on trade and may need to offer bigger concession­s to keep its relationsh­ip with its biggest trading partner on an even keel. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Seeking a more positive spin on US-China economic talks viewed as ending in discord, China said that the two sides agreed to ‘active and effective measures’ to reduce global excess steel production capacity. — Reuters photo
Seeking a more positive spin on US-China economic talks viewed as ending in discord, China said that the two sides agreed to ‘active and effective measures’ to reduce global excess steel production capacity. — Reuters photo

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