Sun.Star Cebu

US-China talks in shadow of coming tariff increase

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AMERICAN and Chinese negotiator­s are to resume trade talks just hours before the United States is set to raise tariffs on Chinese imports in a dramatic escalation of tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.

In Beijing, Chinese officials said Thursday they will retaliate if President Donald Trump goes ahead with more tariff hikes but offered no specific penalties.

The talks starting up again Thursday, May 9, were thrown into disarray this week after top US trade negotiator Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin accused the Chinese of reneging on commitment­s they’d made earlier. In response to the alleged backslidin­g, the United States is raising tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese imports from 10 percent to 25 percent at 12:01 a.m. Eastern time Friday, May 10.

The two countries are sparring over US allegation­s that China steals technology and pressures American companies into handing over trade secrets, part of an aggressive campaign to turn Chinese companies into world leaders in robotics, electric cars and other advanced industries.

The setback was unexpected. Through late last week, Trump administra­tion officials were suggesting that negotiator­s were making steady progress.

US officials say they got an inkling of China’s second thoughts about prior commitment­s in talks last week in Beijing, but that the backslidin­g became even more apparent in exchanges over the weekend. They wouldn’t identify the specific issues involved.

On Sunday, Trump took to Twitter to express frustratio­n with the pace of the talks.

“The Trade Deal with China continues, but too slowly, as they attempt to renegotiat­e. No!” Trump tweeted, threatenin­g to raise the tariffs. He also said he’d go further and slap 25 percent tariffs on another $325 billion in Chinese imports, covering everything China sells the United States.

US officials are insisting that any deal be strictly enforced so that China lives up to its promises—something they say Beijing has repeatedly failed to do in the past. Also unclear is what would happen to the US tariffs on Chinese imports. China wants them lifted; the US wants to keep tariffs as leverage to pressure the Chinese to comply with any agreement. /

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