China seems ready to compromise on trade
WASHINGTON — China is sending conciliatory signals as U. S. and Chinese negotiators meet in Washington to try to head off a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.
Beijing has dropped an anti- dumping investigation into imported U. S. sorghum, which it had accused the United States of unfairly subsiding. It has also given approval for a U. S. private equity firm to buy Toshiba’s memory chip business.
Those gestures could suggest a thaw with the U. S. as trade talks went on for a second day Friday in Washington.
“China has come to trade,” Larry Kudlow, the top White House economic adviser, told reporters. “They are meetingmany of our demands. No deal yet, to be sure, and it’s probably going to take awhile— it’s a process.”
China’s commerce ministry said Friday that it was ending its inquiry into whether the U. S. was dumping sorghum in the Chinese market at artificially low prices.
A day earlier, Beijing had cleared the way for a group led by the U. S. private equity firm Bain Capital to buy Toshiba’s computer memory chip business.
The moves signaled at least a willingness by Beijing to work toward a deal withWashington.
“I think China is willing to make concessions,” said Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS. “The Chinese stance has been very clear — that China wants to mute any trade dispute. But of course it doesn’t mean China would heed to all the demands the U. S. would place.”
President Donald Trump said Friday that America’s lopsided trade relationship with Beijing — the U. S. trade deficit with China last year reached $ 337 billion, its largest with any other nation — is “bad for our country. And we’re changing it around.”