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China, US resume talks in Beijing

- AP

TRADE negotiator­s from China and the US resumed talks Friday, March 29, to try to resolve their tariff dispute over China’s ambitions to dominate emerging technologi­es.

The representa­tives posed for photos at a government guest house in western Beijing but did not comment about the state of negotiatio­ns in front of reporters.

President Donald Trump expressed optimism about the talks last week, saying, “we’re getting very close.”

The chief American envoy, Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, said this week questions about details and enforcemen­t remain to be answered.

Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin attended a working dinner Thursday night with their Chinese counterpar­t, Vice Premier Liu He, who is to travel to Washington next week. Talks are due to last the entire day Friday.

The meetings are the latest in a rapid-fire series of exchanges seeking to end the conflict that is disrupting trade in goods from soybeans to medical equipment.

“Both teams are currently sparing no effort” on the negotiatio­ns, Chinese commerce ministry spokesman Gao Feng said during a regularly scheduled briefing.

Despite the lack of announced agreements, trade analysts expect at least a preliminar­y accord in coming weeks or months.

Still, they say the negotiatio­ns are unlikely to resolve conflicts that have bedeviled US-Chinese relations for two decades. Major sore points include China’s massive trade surplus with the US and accusation­s it has stolen or coerced the transfer of foreign technology for its own uses.

The latest dispute erupted after Trump raised duties last year on Chinese imports in response to complaints over technology and is fueling fears the battle between the two biggest economies will chill global growth that already shows signs of slowing.

A stumbling block appears to be Washington’s insistence on an enforcemen­t mechanism with penalties if Beijing fails to follow through on commitment­s.

Trump also raised another potential obstacle last week, saying he wants to keep in place 25 percent taxes on $50 billion of Chinese goods imposed last year. The president said, “we need that.”

Washington in September followed up with 10 percent duties on an additional $200 billion. All told, the U.S. tariffs covered roughly half of what the US buys from China.

However, Trump postponed another tariff hike March 1, in a move that may have reduced US leverage in seeking Chinese concession­s.

Beijing is not “in the biggest hurry” so long as Washington delays imposing additional tariffs, said Bryan Mercurio, a trade law specialist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. /

 ?? AP FOTO ?? KEEPING MUM. China’s Vice Premier Liu He (center) poses for a photo with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (right) and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing.
AP FOTO KEEPING MUM. China’s Vice Premier Liu He (center) poses for a photo with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (right) and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing.

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