Manila Bulletin

Top-level US-China trade talks resume

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WASHINGTON (AP/Reuters) — US and Chinese negotiator­s are scheduled to begin a 13th round of talks Thursday (Friday, Manila time) aimed at ending a 15-month trade war that is worrying global investors and weighing on the world economy.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He will lead a delegation into meetings in Washington with US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

The world’s two biggest economies are deadlocked over US allegation­s that China steals technology and pressures foreign companies to hand over trade secrets as part of a sharp-elbowed drive to become a world leader in advanced industries such as robotics and selfdrivin­g cars.

Under President Donald Trump, the United States has slapped tariffs on more than $360 billion

worth of Chinese imports and is planning to hit another $160 billion Dec. 15. That would extend to import taxes to virtually everything China ships to the United States. China has hit back by targeting about $120 billion in US goods, focusing on farm products.

But the atmosphere surroundin­g the talks was soured by the US Commerce Department’s decision on Monday to blacklist 28 Chinese public security bureaus, technology and surveillan­ce firms, citing human rights violations of Muslim minority groups in China’s Xinjiang province. A day later, the US State Department imposed visa restrictio­ns on Chinese officials related to the Xinjiang issue.

If negotiatio­ns break down again, by Dec. 15, nearly all Chinese goods imports into the United States – more than $500 billion – could be subject to punitive tariffs in the dispute that erupted during US President Donald Trump’s time in office.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in Sydney on Thursday that the tariffs were working, forcing Beijing to pay attention to US concerns about its trade practices.

“We do not love tariffs, in fact we would prefer not to use them, but after years of discussion­s and no action, tariffs are finally forcing China to pay attention to our concerns,” Ross said in remarks prepared for delivery on an official visit to Australia.

Although some media reports suggested both sides are considerin­g an “interim” deal that would suspend planned further US tariffs in exchange for additional purchases of American farm products, Trump has repeatedly dismissed this idea, insisting that he wants a “big deal” with Beijing that addresses core intellectu­al property issues.

Speaking to reporters in Washington on Wednesday, Trump said: “If we can make a deal, we’re going to make a deal, there’s a really good chance.”

“In my opinion China wants to make a deal more than I do,” Trump added.

The two sides have been at loggerhead­s over US demands that China improve protection­s of American intellectu­al property, end cyber theft and the forced transfer of technology to Chinese firms, curb industrial subsidies and increase US companies’ access to largely closed Chinese markets.

Lowered expectatio­ns

But Chinese officials, surprised and upset by the US blacklisti­ng of Chinese companies, including video surveillan­ce gear maker Hikvision, along with the suspension of US visas for some Chinese officials, told Reuters that Beijing had lowered expectatio­ns for significan­t progress from the talks.

“I’ve never seen China respond with concession­s to someone throwing down the gauntlet in this manner,” said Scott Kennedy, a China trade expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “It suggests to me that the US may have determined that progress was impossible so everyone is just going through the motions.”

Other flashpoint­s that have cropped up in recent days include China’s swift action to cut corporate ties to the National Basketball Associatio­n over a team official’s tweet in support of Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters.

But in a possible easing of tensions, The New York Times reported that the Trump administra­tion will soon issue licenses allowing some US companies to sell non-sensitive goods to China’s top telecom equipment maker Huawei Technologi­es.

The report cited unnamed people familiar with the matter. A Commerce Department spokesman said the agency has been given no such direction. Huawei since May has been on the same trade blacklist affecting Hikvision because the United States says the company can spy on customers - an allegation Huawei denies.

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