The Borneo Post

Critical US-China trade talks end in Beijing

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Both sides recognise there are still big difference­s on some issues and that they need to continue to step up their work to make progress.

BEIJING: China and the US ended the second day of highstakes trade talks with ‘ big difference­s’, Beijing said, leaving the world’s two largest economies on the brink of a trade war that could have knock- on effects on the global economy.

The talks were aimed at forestalli­ng momentum towards the looming conflict, with both sides prepared to pull the trigger on tariffs that could affect trade in billions of dollars of goods.

“Both sides recognise there are still big difference­s on some issues and that they need to continue to step up their work to make progress,” China said in a statement released by the official Xinhua state news agency.

The discussion­s promised a potential off-ramp for the trade conflict – US President Donald Trump has threatened to levy new tariffs on US$ 150 billion of Chinese imports while Beijing shot back with a list of US$ 50 billion in targeted US goods.

“The two sides exchanged views on expanding US exports to China, trade in services, bilateral investment, protection of intellectu­al property rights, resolution of tariffs and non-tariff measures,” Xinhua said.

It added that they had reached “a consensus in some areas”, without elaboratin­g. The countries agreed to establish a “working mechanism” to continue talks, it said.

The announceme­nt followed comments by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin earlier in the day that the two sides were having

China

“very good conversati­ons”.

However, American officials declined to give further details of the discussion­s.

China is confused about what the US actually wants, said Zhang Monan, a researcher at the influentia­l think-tank China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges.

The American pressure on Beijing has heightened, she said, even as Beijing has taken several steps to liberalise its markets.

Those reforms include a timeline to lift foreign ownership restrictio­ns for automakers, permitting foreign investors to take controllin­g stakes in some financial firms, and on Friday, allowing foreign companies to trade iron futures on domestic exchanges.

But a list of demands presented to Beijing before the negotiatio­ns got under way showed such piecemeal reforms fell far short of US expectatio­ns.

The document, divided into eight sections, was presented as a starting point for negotiatio­ns, according to Bloomberg News.

The asks included cutting China’s trade surplus with the US by at least US$ 200 billion by the end of 2020, lowering all tariffs to match American levels, eliminatin­g technology transfer practises, and cutting off support for some industries fostered by China’s industrial policies, Bloomberg reported.

Liu He, vice premier in charge of the economy, led the discussion­s for China.

Known as President Xi Jinping’s right hand man on economic matters, Liu was noticeably absent from Xi’s speech Friday morning commemorat­ing the birth of Karl Marx and the continued relevance of his theories to China.

The speech alluded to Beijing’s determinat­ion to keep true market capitalism at arm’s length – a key area of concern for the American delegation that has balked at China’s state-led industrial policy and fostering of domestic industry.

Friction is highest over China’s ‘Made in China 2025’ programme, designed to spring China from a maker of sports shoes and denims into high-tech goods.

For Beijing, recent moves by Washington to ban US sales to telecom giant ZTE and the reported opening of a similar probe into goliath Huawei, have reinforced the wisdom of the policy.

A spokespers­on for the Ministry of Commerce said China had taken up the ban with the US delegation.

“The Chinese side made solemn representa­tions with the US in respect of the ZTE Corporatio­n case” the commerce ministry statement said, adding that the Americans said they would relay the issue to Trump.

“The trade friction between the US and China is a long-term issue, this is not something that can be solved in the short term,” Zhang said.

The talks may have received some tailwinds from the latest trade data out of Washington, showing the US global trade deficit narrowing in March.

The goods deficit with China fell 11.5 per cent from February to US$ 25.8 billion, but analysts cautioned seasonal factors like China’s New Year holidays were likely at play.

Bilateral trade in coming months could be hurt by US and Chinese buyers planning to avoid tariffs, with news this week that China may already be downsizing its soybean imports from the US.

“Whatever they’re buying is non- US,” said Soren Schroder, CEO of agricultur­al giant Bunge Limited.

“They’re buying beans in Canada, in Brazil, mostly Brazil, but very deliberate­ly not buying anything from the US,” Schroder said in the interview with Bloomberg News on Wednesday.

Soybeans were China’s largest import from the US last year, worth US$ 14 billion. — AFP

 ??  ?? US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) and US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross (right) walk through a hotel lobby as they head to the Diaoyutai State Guest House to meet Chinese officials for ongoing trade talks in Beijing. — AFP photo
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) and US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross (right) walk through a hotel lobby as they head to the Diaoyutai State Guest House to meet Chinese officials for ongoing trade talks in Beijing. — AFP photo

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