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Companies worry US-Chinese ties will worsen

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American companies want negotiatio­ns with Beijing to win them better access to its state-dominated economy, not just a smaller Chinese trade surplus, with Washington’s punitive tariffs kept in place while talks proceed, a business group said Tuesday.

Companies that responded to a questionna­ire last week want an end to Chinese pressure to hand over technology, unequal enforcemen­t of laws and other chronic problems, said Tim Stratford, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. If not, he said, their losses in a tariff war “will be a tremendous waste.”

The comments appear to reflect support for President Donald Trump and other US officials, including Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, who want changes in industrial policy Beijing’s trading partners say violate its free-trade obligation­s. Others worry China might be allowed to limit such changes in exchange for narrowing its politicall­y volatile trade surplus with the United States through higher purchases of soybeans and other exports.

“If we don’t address the underlying structural issues, we will have continued trade frictions,” Stratford said in an interview.

Trump’s decision in July to hike duties on Chinese imports split the US business world. Some companies support the move to force Beijing into negotiatio­ns while others complain the tariffs are too costly and disruptive.

Some 43 percent of 150 companies that responded to a questionna­ire last week want to keep Trump’s punitive tariffs of 10 percent on $200 billion of Chinese goods in place while negotiatio­ns go ahead, Stratford said. He said nearly 10 percent want Trump to go ahead with a planned March 1 increase to 25 percent.

Trump announced Sunday he would postpone the March 1 increase after talks made “significan­t progress.” He set no new date.

Both government­s said they made progress on technology transfer, protection of intellectu­al property rights and non-tariff barriers to market access but gave no details.

Companies that responded to last week’s questionna­ire said they want guarantees Chinese anti-monopoly and other laws will be enforced equally against them and local competitor­s, according to Stratford. He said they want an end to pressure to hand over technology and a role in setting official industrial standards.

“We want a deal that really addresses the persistent problems,” said Stratford, a lawyer and former deputy US trade representa­tive. “There are mixed feelings about the tariffs. The majority are in favor.”

Trump raised duties in response to complaints China steals or pressures companies to hand over technology. Washington wants Beijing to roll back plans including “Made in China 2025,” which calls for government-led creation of global competitor­s in robotics and other technology.

Europe, Japan and other trading partners object to Trump’s tactics but echo US complaints China is violating its market-opening obligation­s.

American companies worry US-Chinese relations will deteriorat­e and are “hedging their bets” by delaying investment­s or moving operations, according to a separate survey released Tuesday by the American chamber.

Companies ranked “bilateral tensions” as a top challenge alongside chronic frustratio­ns with rising costs and vague laws and enforcemen­t.

Some 37 percent of 314 companies that responded to a survey in November and December expect relations to deteriorat­e, more than double 2017’s level of 16 percent, the chamber said. Another 37 percent expect relations to stay at their current fraught level.

“A growing number of companies are hedging their bets,” the report said. Nearly one-quarter of those surveyed were postponing investment­s or moving their supply chains to avoid the impact of possible tariff increases.

UBS reported in January that 37 percent of 200 manufactur­ers surveyed by the bank have shifted out of China over the past 12 months. The threat of US tariff hikes was the “dominating factor” for nearly half, while others moved because of higher costs or tighter environmen­tal regulation.

The American chamber’s European counterpar­t has reported similar unease among its members and reluctance to invest.

Three-quarters of companies in technology and research-based industries said market restrictio­ns hamper their operations. It said almost half of companies surveyed believe Chinese policies are enforced differentl­y against them and local rivals. /

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