Bangkok Post

China signals US tariff delay not enough to stop retaliatio­n

- MIAO HAN

BEIJING: China yesterday called planned US tariffs on an additional $300 billion in Chinese goods a violation of accords reached by presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, signaling an American move earlier this week to delay some of those levies was not enough to stave off retaliatio­n.

“The new 10% tariffs have taken the United States and China off the track of resolving their dispute through negotiatio­n,’’ the State Council Tariff Committee, which has overseen tit-for-tat retaliatio­n, said in a short statement.

“China has no choice but to take necessary measures to retaliate,” it said, without specifying what the nation would do.

Trump announced the new tariffs this month, after which China halted purchases of agricultur­al goods and allowed the yuan to weaken.

Still, top negotiator­s held a phone call earlier this week and the US delayed the imposition of some of the new tariffs.

Negotiator­s also agreed to have another phone call in the coming two weeks and people familiar with the negotiatio­ns have said that the Chinese delegation is sticking to their plan to travel to the US in September for faceto-face meetings.

“The statement indicates that China doesn’t think the US delaying some of the tariffs is enough,’’ said Zhou Xiaoming, a former Ministry of Commerce official and diplomat.

“China is very serious and is sticking to the position that no new tariffs should be imposed at all,’’ he said, adding that China’s retaliatio­n “may not be limited to tariffs.”

Hu Xijin, the editor-in-chief of the Communist Party’s Global Times newspaper, echoed that sentiment.

He tweeted before the announceme­nt that China wanted both sides to respect the consensus reached when Trump and Xi met in Osaka in June.

“I doubt the Chinese side will resume large-scale purchase of US farm goods under the current circumstan­ces,’’ Hu said.

Less than 12 hours before the Chinese statement on retaliatio­n, Trump appeared to float the possibilit­y of another meeting with Xi.

In a flurry of tweets, Trump defended his tariffs decisions, praised Xi and urged the Chinese president to “humanely” resolve the protests that have gripped Hong Kong for more than two months.

Trump ended the posts with an apparent overture to Xi — writing “Personal meeting?” — without clarifying whether he was suggesting another summit.

The statement could indicate that it won’t take long for China to reveal its own retaliator­y tariffs, according to Tu Xinquan, dean of the China Institute for WTO Studies at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing.

“The response is about expressing China’s stance even though policy makers know the impact on the US economy will be limited,’’ he said.

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