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China, US declare halt to new tariffs

- Reuters Buenos Aires AP

China and the US agreed to halt additional tariffs in a deal that keeps their trade war from escalating while the two sides hold fresh talks to try to reach an agreement within 90 days.

The White House said on Saturday that President Donald Trump told Chinese President Xi Jinping during talks in Argentina that he would not boost tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods to 25 percent on Jan. 1 as previously announced.

Beijing for its part agreed to buy an unspecifie­d but “very substantia­l” amount of agricultur­al, energy, industrial and other products, the White House said in a statement. The two sides would also launch new trade talks to address issues including technology transfer, intellectu­al property, non-tariff barriers, cyber theft and agricultur­e.

If no deal is reached within 90 days, both parties agreed that the 10 percent tariffs will be raised to 25 percent, the White House said.

On Sunday, China’s state-run media lauded the “important consensus” reached by the two leaders but did not mention the 90-day deadline.

“I think this is not a breakthrou­gh — it’s more of avoiding a breakdown. This is not a worst case outcome but the hard work is ahead of them,” said Paul Haenle, Director at the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center in Beijing. “The Chinese have to come into (the talks) with a sense of urgency.”

Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump hailed his agreement with Xi.

“It’s an incredible deal,” Trump said. “What I’d be doing is holding back on tariffs. China will be opening up. China will be getting rid of tariffs.”

He said under the deal China would buy a “tremendous amount of agricultur­al and other products” from the US.

State Councillor Wang Yi, the Chinese government’s top diplomat, told reporters that the two sides believed the agreement “effectivel­y prevented the expansion of economic frictions between the two countries.”

“Facts show that joint interests between China and the United States are greater than the disputes, and the need for cooperatio­n is greater than frictions,” he said.

US companies and consumers are bearing part of the cost of the US tariffs on China by paying higher prices for goods, and many companies have increased prices of imported goods. At the same time, US farmers have been hurt by reduced Chinese imports of soybeans and other products.

China “is open to approving” US company Qualcomm’s deal to acquire NXP Semiconduc­tors, the White House said.

In July, Qualcomm — the world’s biggest smartphone chip maker — walked away from a $44 billion deal to buy NXP after failing to secure Chinese regulatory approval, becoming a high-profile victim of the China-US trade dispute.

Beyond trade, Xi also agreed to designate the drug fentanyl as a controlled substance, the White House said.

For more than a year, Trump has raised concerns about the synthetic opioid being sent from China to the US, which is facing an epidemic of opioid-related deaths.

Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington, said the US appeared to come out slightly ahead in the agreement.

“Beijing at best gets a temporary reprieve from additional tariffs, but was unable to get the US to agree to return to ‘ business as usual’,” he said.

“Instead, only the pace of deteriorat­ion has changed, not the direction of the relationsh­ip,” Kennedy added.

Sun Zhe, co-director of the China Initiative at Columbia University, said China might have made greater concession­s this time but may be looking for more out of the US in the coming months.

“Some Chinese speculate about what compromise the United States can make in the future because China promised a lot and Trump just promised to not raise US tariffs,” he added.

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