The Borneo Post

Trump to delay China tariff hike after trade talks ‘progress’

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said he would delay a planned tariff increase on Chinese exports after both sides hailed ‘substantia­l progress’ in trade talks, raising the prospect of a summit with President Xi Jinping to seal the deal.

Trump said there could be ‘very big news’ in the next two weeks, and he planned to meet with Xi at the US leader’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida if more progress is made.

Top negotiator­s met in Washington for four days of talks that ended on Sunday in an effort to resolve a months-long trade war that analysts fear could torpedo the global economy.

The United States had been due to increase tariffs on more than US$ 200 billion in Chinese goods on March 1, but Trump said he would now delay the punitive duties following the ‘ very productive talks’.

“I am pleased to report that the US has made substantia­l progress in our trade talks with China on important structural issues including intellectu­al property protection, technology transfer, agricultur­e, services, currency, and many other issues,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

The official Xinhua news agency used almost the exact same language, reporting “substantia­l progress” on those thorny issues in the talks led by Xi’s top trade negotiator, Vice Premier Liu He.

The delegation­s “came a step closer to realising the important consensus reached” by Trump and Xi late last year, Xinhua said.

The report said the parties also agreed to “carry out follow-ups in accordance with the instructio­ns of the two heads of state”.

“Assuming both sides make additional progress, we will be planning a Summit for President Xi and myself, at Mar- a-Lago, to conclude an agreement,” Trump tweeted.

“A very good weekend for US & China!” After exchanging tit-fortat tariffs on more than US$ 300 billion in total two-way trade, Trump and Xi declared a truce in December and agreed to hold off on further tariffs or retaliatio­n for 90 days.

“If all works well, we’ll have very big news over the next week or two,” Trump told state leaders at the Governors’ Ball in the White House Sunday evening.

Noting the many questions on the state of trade negotiatio­ns from governors, Trump added: “China is everywhere.”

“Let’s see what happens. We still have a little ways to go,” he said of a deal. Trump initiated the trade war, which ate into company profits and contribute­d to stock market plunges, because of complaints about unfair Chinese trade practices – concerns shared by the European Union, Japan and others.

Shanghai’s stock exchange led a rally across Asian markets following Trump’s announceme­nt of a delay in the tariffs increase.

The news also fired currency markets with the yuan extending gains to a seven-month high, while other high-yielding, riskier units were also up against the dollar.

Xi had also struck a positive tone in a letter Liu delivered to Trump on Friday, saying he hoped the negotiatio­ns would be held in a “win-win” spirit that would lead to a mutually beneficial agreement.

Analysts say the two sides are likely to trumpet mutual agreements to resolve the easier parts of the trade dispute – increasing purchases of American goods, more open investment in China and tougher protection­s for intellectu­al property and proprietar­y technology.

The harder parts covering issues such as scaling back China’s ambitious industrial strategy for global pre- eminence, meanwhile, are another question.

Trump said Friday that an agreement on currency manipulati­on will be included in the trade pact, but otherwise few details have been made public.

Beijing has reportedly proposed a significan­t increase in its imports of US energy and agricultur­al exports. Still, a broader deal could be difficult given the US demands for far-reaching structural changes.

China’s retaliatio­n has hit US farm exports hard.

The US Agricultur­e Department estimated this month that US soy exports would not return to their pre-trade war levels for another six years. — AFP

 ??  ?? Graphic showing trade profiles for the US and China. — AFP graphic
Graphic showing trade profiles for the US and China. — AFP graphic

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