Business World

US, China to resume trade talks amid low expectatio­ns

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WASHINGTON — US and Chinese officials are set to resume contentiou­s trade talks today under the cloud of a prediction by US President Donald Trump that there would be no real progress.

The discussion­s among mid-level officials could set a framework for further negotiatio­ns as each country prepares to hit the other with new tariffs on Thursday in a deepening dispute over China’s economic policies.

Mr. Trump has threatened to impose duties on virtually all of the more than $500 billion of Chinese goods exported to the US unless it meets his demands.

The two days of meetings are the first formal US-China trade talks since US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross met Chinese economic adviser Liu He in Beijing in June.

After negotiatio­ns in May, Beijing believed it had assurances from the US that tariffs were off the table. But less than 10 days later, the White House said it would push forward on punitive measures.

China has said it hopes for quiet, steady talks to get “a good result on the basis of equality, parity and trust.”

But Mr. Trump told Reuters on Monday that he did not “anticipate much.” In an interview, he said resolving the trade dispute will “take time because China’s done too well for too long, and they’ve become spoiled.”

Mr. Trump also accused China of manipulati­ng its yuan currency to make up for the effect of tariffs, while arguing the US central bank should be more accommodat­ing. On Tuesday, however, Trump administra­tion officials were largely silent about the latest round of talks. Spokespers­ons for the US Treasury, the US Trade Representa­tive’s office and the US Commerce department did not respond to queries about the Treasury-led meetings.

“These are working-level discussion­s with representa­tives from across the administra­tion,” a White House official told Reuters. The official declined further comment but pointed out Mr. Trump’s own pessimisti­c comments in the Reuters interview.

“This is to some extent a temperatur­e-taking exercise,” said Scott Kennedy, director of China studies at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “Expectatio­ns are probably low on both sides.”

Previous talks were held by cabinetlev­el ministers, including Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Commerce’s Mr. Ross.

The talks on Wednesday and Thursday will led by lower-level officials, Treasury Undersecre­tary David Malpass and Chinese Commerce Vice Minister Wang Shouwen. Deputy USTR Jeffrey Gerrish is also expected to participat­e.

“The vice minister from Mofcom is not going to be authorized to make some great offer, but if the Chinese say one interestin­g thing, maybe you set up a second meeting and the level goes up a step,” said Derek Scissors, a China scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank.

“But I’d say there’s an 80-90 percent chance they are a total waste of time, and that’s why no one in the administra­tion is talking about this,” he added.

Ultimately Trump will need to personally be involved in settling the dispute with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Scissors said.

LENGTHY DEMANDS

Trump’s administra­tion is pressing China to make sweeping economic policy changes to better protect US intellectu­al property, end its industrial subsidy efforts and open its markets to foreign competitio­n.

In May, US officials presented China with a lengthy list of demands that also included reducing the US trade deficit with China by $200 billion annually. It is unclear whether that list has been revised for the latest round.

Beijing denies US allegation­s that it systematic­ally forces the unfair transfer of US technology and insists that it adheres to World Trade Organizati­on rules.

The discussion­s this week were expected to do little to stop the scheduled activation of 25% US tariffs on another $16 billion in Chinese goods scheduled to take effect at 12:01 a.m. EDT (0401 GMT), along with immediate retaliator­y tariffs expected from China on $16 billion of US goods.

But this could soon trigger Mr. Trump’s unveiling of a second $200 billion to $300 billion list of Chinese goods to be targeted with US tariffs.

On June 16, when Mr. Trump first threatened to dramatical­ly escalate his tariffs with an initial $200 billion list of Chinese goods, he said would hit China with tariffs on another $200 billion in goods if Beijing retaliated a second time.

Erin Ennis, senior vice-president of the US-China Business Council, said it was probably good for the two sides to start with lower level officials who could “get into the weeds” on the IP protection problems that US companies are facing in China.

“It’s good that they’re talking because not talking isn’t solving the issues and is only leading to more tariffs,” she said. —

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