Business World

US, China tiptoe around holes in new trade deal

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WASHINGTON — The United States and China signed an initial trade deal on Wednesday that will roll back some tariffs and boost Chinese purchases of US products, defusing an 18-month row between the world’s two largest economies but leaving a number of sore spots unresolved.

Beijing and Washington touted the “Phase 1” agreement as a step forward after months of start-and-stop talks, and investors greeted the news with relief. Even so, there was skepticism the US-China trade relationsh­ip was now firmly on the mend.

The deal fails to address structural economic issues that led to the trade conflict, does not fully eliminate the tariffs that have slowed the global economy, and sets hard-to-achieve purchase targets, analysts and industry leaders said.

While acknowledg­ing the need for further negotiatio­ns with China to solve a host of other problems, President Donald Trump hailed the agreement as a win for the US economy and his administra­tion’s trade policies.

“Together, we are righting the wrongs of the past and delivering a future of economic justice and security for American workers, farmers and families,” Trump said in rambling remarks at the White House alongside US and Chinese officials.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He read a letter from President Xi Jinping in which the Chinese leader praised the deal as a sign the two countries could resolve their difference­s with dialogue.

The centerpiec­e of the deal is a pledge by China to purchase at least an additional $200 billion worth of US farm products and other goods and services over two years, above a baseline of $186 billion in purchases in 2017, the White House said.

Commitment­s include $54 billion in additional energy purchases, $78 billion in additional manufactur­ing purchases, $32 billion more in farm products, and $38 billion in services, acWASHINGT­ON

cording to a deal document released by the White House.

Liu said Chinese companies would buy $40 billion in US agricultur­al products annually over the next two years “based on market conditions.” Beijing had balked at committing to buy set amounts of US farm goods earlier, and has inked new soybean contracts with Brazil since the trade war started.

Key world stock market indexes climbed to record highs on hopes the deal would reduce tensions, before closing below those highs, while oil prices slid on doubts the pact will spur world economic growth and boost crude demand.

Soybean futures, which traded 0.4% lower throughout much of the deal signing ceremony, sank even further after Liu’s remarks, a sign that farmers and traders

were dubious about the purchase goals.

The deal does not end retaliator­y tariffs on American farm exports, makes farmers “increasing­ly reliant” on Chinese statecontr­olled purchases, and does not address “big structural changes,” Michelle Erickson-Jones, a wheat farmer and spokeswoma­n for Farmers for Free Trade, said in a statement.

Trump and his economic advisers had pledged to attack Beijing’s long-standing practice of propping up state-owned companies and flooding internatio­nal markets with low-priced goods as the trade war heated up.

Although the deal could be a boost to US farmers, automakers and heavy equipment manufactur­ers, some analysts question China’s ability to divert imports

from other trading partners to the United States.

“I find a radical shift in Chinese spending unlikely. I have low expectatio­ns for meeting stated goals,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s. “But I do think the whole negotiatio­n has moved the football forward for both the US and China.”

Trump, who has embraced an “America First” policy aimed at rebalancin­g global trade in favor of US companies and workers, said China had pledged action to confront the problem of pirated or counterfei­ted goods and said the deal included strong protection of intellectu­al property rights.

US Speaker of the House of Representa­tive Nancy Pelosi said Trump’s China strategy had “inflicted

deep, long-term damage to American agricultur­e and rattled our economy in exchange for more of the promises that Beijing has been breaking for years,” in a statement.

Earlier, top White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow told Fox News the agreement would add 0.5 percentage point to US gross domestic product growth in both 2020 and 2021.

Aviation industry sources said Boeing Co. was expected to win a major order for widebody jets from China, including its 787 or 777-9 models, or a mixture of both. Such a deal could ease pressure on the 787 Dreamliner, which has suffered from a broad downturn in demand for large jets, forcing the planemaker to trim production late last year.

CCTV, China’s state-run television outlet, said the deal would satisfy China’s increasing­ly demanding consumers by supplying products like dairy, poultry, beef, pork, and processed meat from the United States.

TARIFFS TO STAY

The Phase 1 deal, reached in December, canceled planned US tariffs on Chinese-made cellphones, toys and laptop computers and halved the tariff rate to 7.5% on about $120 billion worth of other Chinese goods, including flat-panel television­s, Bluetooth headphones and footwear.

But it will leave in place 25% tariffs on a $250-billion array of Chinese industrial goods and components used by US manufactur­ers, and China’s retaliator­y tariffs on over $100 billion in US goods.

Market turmoil and reduced investment tied to the trade war cut global growth in 2019 to its lowest rate since the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said in October.

Tariffs on Chinese imports have cost US companies $46 billion. Evidence is mounting that tariffs have raised input costs for US manufactur­ers, eroding their competitiv­eness.

Diesel engine maker Cummins, Inc. said on Tuesday the deal will leave it paying $150 million in tariffs for engines and castings that it produces in China. It urged the parties to take steps to eliminate all the tariffs.

Trump, who has been touting the Phase 1 deal as a pillar of his 2020 re-election campaign, said he would agree to remove the remaining tariffs once the two sides had negotiated a “Phase 2” agreement.

“They will all come off as soon as we finish Phase 2,” said Trump, who added that he would visit China in the not-too-distant future.

Trump added that those negotiatio­ns would start soon, though in a Fox Business Network interview that aired on Wednesday evening, Vice-President Mike Pence said: “We’ve already begun discussion­s on a Phase 2 deal.” —

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