Los Angeles Times

Analysts question China’s trade offer

- don.lee@latimes.com noah.bierman @latimes.com

lysts warn, such purchases would do little to address systemic problems in the trading relationsh­ip and American grievances involving China’s aggressive industrial policies. Many U.S. businesses have complained about China’s theft of intellectu­al property and forced technology transfers to do business there.

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.) urged Trump to reject the offer. “Don’t let President Xi play you,” Schumer tweeted Friday. “Trading some short-term purchases of American goods and giving up on China’s theft of American intellectu­al property (which are our family jewels that will create millions of good paying jobs) is the art of a bad deal.”

Kudlow stressed that such issues were still on the table. “I think just as important, they have to lower their tariff rates, they have to lower their non-tariff barriers,” he said. “We have to have a verifiable process whereby the technology transfers and the theft of intellectu­al property stops.”

Also, some Chinese officials cast doubt on the $200billion offer. According to Bloomberg on Friday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official said he was unaware of such an agreement.

Still, American business groups with interests in China were encouraged by the continuing dialogue and noted that the latest visit by the Beijing delegation, led by Vice Premier Liu He, marked a sharp contrast to Liu’s previous meeting in Washington in February, when the high-level emissary was practicall­y snubbed by Trump. The president announced tariffs targeting Chinese steel on the day Liu was holding talks with U.S. officials.

On Thursday, Trump received Liu in the Oval Office and tweeted a photo of the two men shaking hands.

Just two weeks ago, Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and other senior officials, in a visit to Beijing, came away empty after exchanging unusually tough demands with Liu and other Chinese officials.

“They were pretty far apart and [had] a wide gap to overcome, so I think it’s good that on a pretty quick basis that Vice Premier Liu comes here to continue discussion­s,” said John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council, which represents some 200 large companies doing business in China, such as General Motors, Walmart and FedEx.

He said he hoped for an “early harvest,” or some immediate outcomes, to emerge from the two days of talks that could defuse tensions and help lead both sides to step back from threats of massive tariffs that have stoked fears of a trade war between the two biggest global economies.

At the same time, Frisbie said, any short-term results should not come at the expense of dealing squarely with the structural issues in the relationsh­ip, such as market access and protection of intellectu­al property.

At the top of the Trump administra­tion’s demands outlined two weeks ago was a $200-billion reduction in China’s trade surplus with the U.S., reflecting the president’s perspectiv­e of the bilateral trade number as the key scorecard, even though economists widely view the U.S. trade deficit as caused largely by a mismatch between the nation’s savings and investment­s.

China’s response in committing to ramp up purchases of American goods was clearly aimed at soothing Trump’s sore point with China, but experts said it was hard to see how Beijing could make a big dent in the deficit anytime soon.

For one thing, China can buy only so many Boeing airplanes and soybeans, its top two U.S. imports. Beijing could direct Chinese firms to shift purchases from other countries to the U.S., but that would present problems for China’s relations with other nations and also risk putting too much dependence on America.

The Chinese proposal was said to include importing the United States’ growing production of energy resources such as natural gas, but a lack of pipeline and other U.S. infrastruc­ture constraint­s would limit such purchases in the near term.

For years Chinese officials have argued that the U.S. could improve its trade balance by relaxing export controls prohibitin­g the sale of various U.S. software, equipment and other products that could contribute to China’s military capabiliti­es.

But the recent trend has been to tighten these controls, not ease them, the latest example being the recent ban on U.S. companies’ selling products to ZTE, the giant Chinese telecom-equipment maker. The Trump administra­tion last month sanctioned ZTE for violating a previous settlement over illegal shipments to Iran, although the president this week indicated that those restrictio­ns could be softened as a favor to Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Trump’s reversal on ZTE helped pave the way for the talks this week but also perpetuate­d confusion and questions about what Trump would be willing to accept and what would weigh in that decision.

As before, the president on Thursday referred to his special relationsh­ip with China’s Xi. At the same time, he criticized China and other U.S. trading partners as “very spoiled.” He also suggested China was behind North Korea’s recent second thoughts about attending a June summit with Trump as a way to increase China’s leverage in the U.S. trade talks.

Previously Trump had offered to ease up trade demands on China if Xi would help the U.S. rein in North Korea’s nuclear program.

“I’m at a loss as to understand what the administra­tion’s priorities are with China,” said Wendy Cutler, who has led trade negotiatio­ns for Presidents George W. Bush and Obama and is now vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute.

“They’ve put so many issues on the table, and it’s unclear to me whether they would be willing to settle for a deal if China agrees to buy more U.S. goods and lower the trade deficit,” she said. “Is that sufficient for a deal with some market access commitment­s, or do they need to see underlying structural changes? ... All of these issues were in their proposal, and they just don’t lend themselves to a quick deal.”

Sharp difference­s in the upper reaches of the Trump administra­tion also have complicate­d matters. The U.S. side is being led by Mnuchin, who analysts say has been eager to seek a deal with China’s Liu and calm trade waters that have weighed on financial markets and the broader American economy. But other senior officials, Lighthizer and especially trade advisor Peter Navarro, have been more vocal critics of the Chinese and have preferred a more antagonist­ic approach.

Navarro, a former UC Irvine professor and noted China hawk, was said to have been excluded from the two-day meetings with Liu and the Chinese delegation.

“The Chinese don’t want him in the room, and if the U.S. wants a deal, the U.S. doesn’t want him either,” said Derek Scissors, a China expert at the American Enterprise Institute.

Regardless of the rift or any immediate gains from the talks, Scissors said, the forces shaping the longterm competitiv­e battle between the two countries will be much more difficult to find a middle ground on.

“Even if there’s a deal, it won’t change the trajectory of the U.S.-China story,” he said.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? WORKERS at a Chinese port move bags of soybeans, one of China’s top U.S. imports, along with Boeing jets.
AFP/Getty Images WORKERS at a Chinese port move bags of soybeans, one of China’s top U.S. imports, along with Boeing jets.

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