The Borneo Post

US wants ‘concrete’ trade action from China within 90 days

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WASHINGTON: The United States said it will need to see ‘something concrete’ from China in the next 90 days to build a real agreement on trade, two days after Donald Trump and Xi Jinping called a truce in the escalating confrontat­ion between the two economic powerhouse­s.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on CNBC the US and China had held “very specific discussion­s” in Buenos Aires on Saturday evening on steps to defuse their conflict, which involves hundreds of billions in bilateral trade and had roiled world markets for months.

White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said he expected the 25 per cent punitive tariffs on US farm goods to be rolled back and urged China to take immediate steps to implement some of its commitment­s in order to give them “more credibilit­y.”

Mnuchin said for the first time there was “a clear path” to reduce the US trade deficit with China to zero.

“There was a significan­t commitment from both leaders on what needs to be done over the 90 days and instructio­ns to both teams to negotiate and turn this into a real agreement with specific action items, deliverabl­es and time frames,” Mnuchin said.

Following the Trump-Xi talks, which took place over dinner at the end of the G20 summit, Washington agreed to hold off on Trump’s threat to impose 25 per cent tariffs on US$ 200 billion worth of Chinese goods from December 1, leaving them at the current 10 per cent rate.

In return, China is to purchase ‘ very substantia­l’ amounts of

There was a significan­t commitment from both leaders on what needs to be done over the 90 days and instructio­ns to both teams to negotiate and turn this into a real agreement with specific action items, deliverabl­es and time frames. Steven Mnuchin, Treasury Secretary

agricultur­al, energy, industrial and other products from the United States.

In a surprise announceme­nt tweeted Sunday night, Trump also said China would “reduce and remove” tariffs of 40 per cent on cars, though Beijing has yet to confirm the move.

Kudlow told reporters that while there was no agreement on the final level for tariffs on US autos “I expect those tariffs to go to zero.”

And while he said the “history is not great” with China on trade, he was optimistic.

“We’ve never been close to this.”

The US trade deficit with China was US$ 335 billion last year and many manufactur­ers rely on inputs from the world’s number two economy, so eliminatin­g the deficit would be an extraordin­ary goal.

Trump’s aggressive trade actions left in their wake a farm industry suffering from China’s retaliatio­n, hitting soybeans especially hard, and a business sector fraught with uncertaint­y, facing higher costs and holding off on investment.

But Mnuchin said, “I think there’s no question the president’s tariff strategy has worked. This is the first time they’ve responded on very, very specific issues.”

China retaliated against key US soybeans with a 25 per cent tariff since July, which caused exports to drop almost to zero in August and September compared to those months in 2017.

“My expectatio­n is that China will roll back those tariffs quickly,” Kudlow said.

Financial markets surged early Monday celebratin­g news of the ceasefire, and though by the end of the day the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average had given back some gains, it still closed up nearly 300 points.

However, analysts were much more cautious, saying it seemed unlikely a deal could be reached on such a rapid timeline and pointing to discrepanc­ies in the claims of victory from Washington and Beijing.

“Beyond the political spin, the meeting between Trump and Xi can be considered a success in that the threatened escalation of trade tensions has been pushed back three months and the two parties are once again communicat­ing,” Greg Daco of Oxford Economics said.

However “we remain sceptical of a substantia­l trade deal between the two economic giants.”

Carl Weinberg of High Frequency Economics noted that the diverging messages from Xi and Trump after the meeting were creating doubt about what was agreed.

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