The Pak Banker

US businesses upbeat about tariff overtures

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Leading US business groups said they expect that the latest goodwill gestures of the US and Chinese government­s will usher in "productive" talks and put an end to the tariff increases that have led to their protracted trade war.

Plans were announced on Wednesday by the US leader to delay a tariff increase on $250 billion worth of Chinese imports planned for Oct 1 for two weeks, until Oct 15. China also said earlier in the day that it was exempting 16 types of US products from duties.

On Friday in Beijing, the Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council said it will exclude some agricultur­al products like soybeans and pork from the additional tariffs on US goods, Xinhua News Agency reported official sources as saying.

Also, Reuters reported that Chinese firms bought at least 10 boatloads of US soybeans, the country's most significan­t purchases since June.

"We hope this (US) announceme­nt, combined with other confidence-building measures from both government­s, will create the conditions necessary for productive trade negotiatio­ns and end the cycle of titfor- tat retaliator­y actions," the Washington-based US-China Business Council said on Thursday.

On Thursday afternoon, the US leader told reporters he doesn't want an interim deal, adding that he would rather get the whole deal done.

Also on Thursday in Beijing, Vice-Premier Liu He said in a meeting with USCBC Chairman Evan Greenberg that the entire world looks forward to seeing progress in trade consultati­ons between China and the United States. The USCBC represents about 200 US companies that do business with China, including some of the world's best-known brands.

Liu said that working groups from the two nations will meet next week and have "earnest discussion­s" on the trade balance, market access, protection of investors and other issues of common concern, according to Xinhua. Greenberg said the US business sector does not want to see a rise in tariffs, and hopes that the two countries will solve their difference­s through consultati­ons and bring bilateral trade back to normal.

USCBC President Craig Allen said, "Tariffs are a tax on our businesses and consumers - the impact on supply chains and company confidence is clearly hurting the economy." Unilateral imposition of tariffs makes US companies less competitiv­e in the global arena, he added.

"We urge both sides to work toward eliminatin­g tariffs, realize the concrete progress that is possible today, and build momentum for longer-term negotiatio­ns on the most challengin­g issues," Allen said.

Jennifer Safavian, executive vicepresid­ent of government affairs at the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, said leading US retailers are hopeful the president's gesture of goodwill in delaying the tariff increases will lead to productive talks between the two countries next month.

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