Business World

US outlines ‘Phase 1’ trade agreement with China

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WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump on Friday outlined the first phase of a deal to end a trade war with China and suspended a threatened tariff hike, but officials on both sides said much more work needed to be done before an accord could be agreed.

The emerging deal, covering agricultur­e, currency and some aspects of intellectu­al property protection­s, would represent the biggest step by the two countries in 15 months to end a tariff tit-for-tat that has whipsawed financial markets and slowed global growth.

But Friday’s announceme­nt did not include many details and Trump said it could take up to five weeks to get a pact written. He acknowledg­ed the agreement could fall apart during that period, though he expressed confidence that it would not.

“I think we have a fundamenta­l understand­ing on the key issues. We’ve gone through a significan­t amount of paper, but there is more work to do,” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said as the two sides gathered with Trump at the White House. “We will not sign an agreement unless we get and can tell the president that this is on paper.”

With Chinese Vice Premier Liu He sitting across a desk from him in the Oval Office after two days of talks between negotiator­s, the president told reporters that the two sides were very close to ending their trade dispute.

“There was a lot of friction between the United States and China, and now it’s a lovefest. That’s a good thing,” he said.

Liu took a different tone in his remarks, however.

“We have made substantia­l progress in many fields. We are happy about it. We’ll continue to make efforts,” Liu said.

China’s official state-owned news organizati­on Xinhua said that both sides “agreed to make the efforts towards a final agreement.”

In an editorial published online by the state-run People’s Daily newspaper on Saturday, China called the latest round of talks constructi­ve, frank and efficient and noted that while the two sides were moving toward a resolution, “it is impossible to resolve the problem by putting arbitrary pressure on the Chinese side.”

Trump, who is eager to show farmers in political swing states that he has their backs, lauded China for agreeing to buy as much as $50 billion in agricultur­al products. But he left tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese products in place.

His announceme­nt, while seen as progress, drew some scepticism.

“I’m unsure that calling what was announced by President Trump an agreement is justified,” said Scott Kennedy, a China trade expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

“If they couldn’t agree on a text, that must mean they’re not done. Wishing an agreement does not one make. This isn’t a skinny deal. It’s an invisible one.”

Mnuchin said the president had agreed not to proceed with a hike in tariffs to 30% from 25% on about $250 billion in Chinese goods that was supposed to have gone into effect on Tuesday.

But US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said Trump had not made a decision about tariffs that were subject to go into effect in December.

“I think that we’re going to have a deal that’s a great deal that’s beyond tariffs,” Trump said.

PHASED APPROACH

The world’s two largest economies have made progress in their trade dispute before without sealing a deal. In May US officials accused China of walking away from a sweeping agreement that was nearly finished over a refusal to make changes to Chinese laws that would have ensured its enforceabi­lity.

Trump had said previously he would not be satisfied with a partial deal to resolve his effort to change China’s trade, intellectu­al property and industrial policy practices, which he argues cost millions of US jobs. On Friday he said he had decided that a phased approach was appropriat­e.

US stocks ended more than 1% higher on Friday but well off the day’s highs after the announceme­nt, with the S&P 500 up 1.09% after rising as much as 1.7% earlier on hopes of an agreement.

Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are both scheduled to attend a Nov. 16 summit of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n countries in Santiago, Chile, and Trump hinted that a written agreement could be signed there.

There have been positive signs from China in recent days.

China’s securities regulator on Friday unveiled a firm timetable for scrapping foreign ownership limits in futures, securities and mutual fund companies for the first time. Increasing foreign access to the sector is among the US demands at the trade talks. Beijing previously said it would further open up its financial sector on its own terms and at its own pace.

On Thursday, the US Department of Agricultur­e confirmed net sales of 142,172 tons of US pork to China in the week ended Oct. 3, the largest weekly sale to the world’s top pork market on record.

The president said China had agreed to make purchases of $40 billion to $50 billion in US agricultur­al goods. Mnuchin said the purchases would be scaled up to that amount annually.

A person briefed on the talks said that the proposed intellectu­al property provisions were largely centered on strengthen­ing “20th century” IP protection­s such as those involving copyrights, trademarks and piracy. Not addressed were more difficult technology transfer issues involving data flows, cybersecur­ity, product standards reviews and a new social credit system that evaluates company behavior.

The status of China’s Huawei Technologi­es Co. Ltd., the world’s biggest telecoms gear maker, which has been put on a US trade blacklist since May, was not part of the deal, Lighthizer said.

Trump said some IP issues would be left for later phases of the talks. He said talks over a second phase would begin as soon as the first phase agreement was signed and said a third phase might be necessary, too.

Liang Haiming, Hong Kongbased chairman of think-tank China Silk Road iValley Research Institute, called the agreement “anesthetic, pain relief, not an antidote.” —

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