Chattanooga Times Free Press

China says Washington asks to resume talks on escalating tariff fight

- BY JOE MCDONALD

BEIJING — Washington has invited Beijing to hold new talks on their escalating tariff dispute, the Chinese foreign ministry said Thursday, ahead of a decision by President Donald Trump on whether to raise duties on $200 billion of Chinese imports.

The announceme­nt followed reports by American and European chambers of commerce that foreign companies in China have been hurt by earlier tariff hikes by both sides in the fight over Beijing’s technology policy.

“We have indeed received an invitation from the U.S. side. We welcome it,” said a ministry spokesman, Geng Shuang. “Now the two sides are in communicat­ion on relevant details.”

Envoys from the two countries last met Aug. 22 in Washington but reported no progress.

Beijing has rejected pressure from the United States to roll back plans for state-led developmen­t of Chinese global champions in robotics, artificial intelligen­ce and other fields.

Washington, Europe and other trading partners say those plans violate China’s marketopen­ing commitment­s. American officials also worry they might erode U.S. industrial leadership.

The two government­s have imposed 25 percent tariffs on $50 billion of each other’s goods.

Two-thirds of American companies that responded to a survey said they have suffered lost sales or lower profits because of that increase, two chambers of commerce reported Thursday.

More companies said they will suffer if Trump goes ahead with his planned tariff hike and Beijing retaliates, according to the American Chambers of Commerce in China and in Shanghai.

In addition to retaliator­y tariffs, companies report China is slowing down customs clearances and stepping up inspection­s and other bureaucrat­ic processes, the chambers said.

Forecaster­s have warned that the worsening conflict between the world’s two biggest traders could cut up to 0.5 percentage point off global economic growth through 2020 if all threatened tariff hikes go ahead.

“American companies are suffering both from China’s retaliator­y tariffs, and — ironically — from U.S. tariffs designed to harm the Chinese economy,” the two chambers said in a statement. “AmCham China and AmCham Shanghai urge both government­s to return to the negotiatin­g table.”

Beijing has issued a list of $60 billion of American products for retaliatio­n if Trump’s next tariff hike goes ahead.

To avoid the tariffs, 30 percent of U.S. companies are looking at moving assembly out of the United States or China or finding new suppliers, the chambers said. They said nearly one-third are thinking about canceling or postponing investment decisions.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN ?? People walk past a mural displaying world currency symbols on the outside of a bank July 20 in Beijing. Amid a worsening tariff battle, China is putting off accepting license applicatio­ns from American companies in financial services and other industries until Washington makes progress toward a settlement, an official of a business group said Tuesday.
AP PHOTO/MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN People walk past a mural displaying world currency symbols on the outside of a bank July 20 in Beijing. Amid a worsening tariff battle, China is putting off accepting license applicatio­ns from American companies in financial services and other industries until Washington makes progress toward a settlement, an official of a business group said Tuesday.

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