Los Angeles Times

China trade deal postpones pain

Trump gains bragging rights without solving the thorniest issues

- By Don Lee and Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — After nearly two years of a bruising trade war, President Trump signed an initial trade deal with China on Wednesday that provides the president with political bragging rights but allows both sides to put off the most difficult disputes until after the November election.

Despite the ceremonial pomp of a White House signing event and Trump’s extravagan­t remarks on his achievemen­t, the so-called Phase 1 agreement only begins to address the potentiall­y dangerous gulf between the United States and China on trade and economic policy.

Speaking in the East Room beside senior Chinese officials, Trump hailed the long-sought agreement as a “momentous step” that was “righting the wrongs of the past.”

The 86-page agreement, which the administra­tion had kept under wraps until Wednesday, includes specific commitment­s by China to ramp up purchases of U.S. farm goods and other products and services, and to protect intellectu­al property and open up financial services.

In many cases, however, the agreement locked in commitment­s that China had adopted or were already in the works. And although analysts were encouraged that the two sides agreed to meet regularly in the hopes of keeping tensions at bay, the Phase 1 text made no mention of tariffs, let alone a

plan to roll them back.

The Trump administra­tion made only a small cut in tariffs on some Chinese goods, leaving in place hefty 25% duties on about $250 billion of imports from China. Beijing made no change in tariffs it has slapped on American products.

Trump described the roller-coaster negotiatio­ns, including punishing tit-fortat tariffs over the last 18 months, as “tough, honest, open and respectful,” and said he would visit China “in the not too distant future.”

Although the signing signified a cease-fire in the trade war, the two nations remain on the cusp of longterm decisions that will have potentiall­y harsh consequenc­es for both Washington and Beijing.

The United States already has moved to restrict Chinese investment­s in America, deny licenses for Chinese telecom firms and blacklist others, notably Huawei. Research collaborat­ions are coming under scrutiny and more Chinese internatio­nal students are being denied visas.

“That means that the fundamenta­l tensions between the U.S. and China will not subside, even if the administra­tion has achieved some incrementa­l progress as well as met certain political goals that could calm the relationsh­ip for the short term,” said Claire Reade, who served as first chief counsel for China trade enforcemen­t at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive from 2006 to 2010.

Over time, the relationsh­ip between the world’s two economic superpower­s seems all but certain to go in one of two directions.

In the best-case scenario, both government­s would pull back from confrontat­ion, expanding their mutual dependency on trade, and at least ameliorati­ng some of Washington’s most serious grievances.

Those include industrial espionage such as cybertheft and Beijing’s heavy subsidies for its many stateowned enterprise­s that most economists say undercut foreign rivals and distort markets. Neither is dealt with in the Phase 1 deal.

“This does not in any sense tackle the big systemic issues that the U.S. and China have on trade,” said Chad Bown, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Robert Lighthizer, Trump’s chief negotiator, acknowledg­ed that the Chinese had actually made more commitment­s in the past than what is in the Phase 1 deal.

What’s new, he said, was the enforcemen­t mechanism, and Lighthizer suggested that the Trump administra­tion would not easily pull back from tariffs that remain on about $360 billion of Chinese products entering the United States.

“Any movement towards a Phase 2 depends on this being implemente­d,” he told reporters Wednesday.

At the White House ceremony, Liu He, China’s vice premier and chief negotiator, read a letter aloud from Chinese President Xi Jinping. The agreement shows that the two countries can work on a “basis of equality and mutual respect,” Xi wrote, expressing hope that “the U.S. side will treat fairly Chinese companies and their regular trade and investment activities.”

Liu said that China would “strictly honor the agreement, accommodat­e each other’s core concerns, and ensure the good implementa­tion of the Phase 1 trade agreement.”

For both sides, however, turning toward a strategy of compromise and short-term sacrifice instead of confrontat­ion would be difficult under the best of circumstan­ces. That may be especially true for the Chinese Communist Party and its elites, who are deeply invested in the status quo.

“Xi Jinping made clear that their system is working very well and that they’re not going to try to make their society or their economic system look like Western capitalism,” said Henry M. Paulson Jr., former Treasury secretary in the George W. Bush administra­tion. He founded the Paulson Institute in 2011 to focus on U.S.China issues and has been in regular contact with senior Chinese officials.

“This is not the China we would like to have, but it is the China we got,” Paulson said. “We are stuck with each other, and both sides have got to figure out a path forward which preserves global peace, stability and sustained economic growth in a rules-based system.”

Analysts fear that if the hard-line, nationalis­tic turn in both countries continues, as seems highly possible in view of a rising tendency among Americans to see China as an adversary, the result could be a new cold war. That would potentiall­y lead to a more isolated and embattled Beijing, with reduced access to Western markets that now support a Chinese economy still dependent on trade and foreign technology.

Eventually, China might be able to shift more assuredly to domestic consumptio­n and homegrown innovation. But the transition, even if ultimately successful, would put enormous political pressure on a government already becoming more authoritar­ian.

“This may be as far as we’re going to go,” said David Bachman, a China expert at the University of Washington, referring to the Phase 1 deal.

“I think it was really an attempt to put the China dispute on the back burner until after the election, with expectatio­n that the Chinese will step up their agricultur­al purchases significan­tly and that the Trump campaign can claim that farmers got a good deal,” he added.

Analysts examining the text of the agreement said there was plenty to be worried about. For one thing, the Chinese have said very little about it, and have yet to release a Chinese language version of it.

The English text is strongly worded, saying, for example, that China “shall ensure” that its imports of U.S. goods and services increase by at least $200 billion over two years from the level in 2017. In that year, China purchased about $190 billion of products and services from the United States, according to U.S. figures.

Chinese farm imports would rise to about $40 billion this year and next on average from $24 billion in 2017, under the deal, and there are numerical commitment­s for manufactur­ed goods, U.S. energy and services.

Although U.S. farm and business groups welcomed those commitment­s, analysts questioned whether China had the capacity to make such large purchases, not to mention World Trade Organizati­on rules and the strains that it could cause China with other trading partners.

Moreover, the text wasn’t clear about what trade data would be used to determine whether China met its pledge, or whether an inability on the part of the Chinese to make purchases because of U.S. export controls could be counted against the commitment.

U.S. officials said that in the deal, Beijing would get a small rollback of tariffs, although there was no mention in the text. Earlier this week, as a goodwill gesture, the Trump administra­tion also withdrew its designatio­n of China as a currency manipulato­r, although the label had little basis or practical significan­ce.

In the agreement, China pledged to refrain from competitiv­e devaluatio­n of its currency and to meet certain transparen­cy requiremen­ts — essentiall­y restating a long-standing pledge.

The enforcemen­t chapter set up a graduated process in which the two sides could bring complaints, appeal them to top trade officials, and allow the parties to ultimately withdraw from the agreement and take remedial action, presumably including new tariffs.

Trump has been consistent in demanding more Chinese purchases of U.S. goods and reducing the large American trade deficit, and he has had modest success. Less clear are his conviction­s and resolve in taking on China to make fundamenta­l changes to its economic system.

“My take on Phase 1 is that it largely restores the status quo,” said Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufactur­ing, a proponent for fair trade. “I’m not optimistic that we’ll get a Phase 2 deal that’s going to dramatical­ly alter the landscape.

“And in that way,” he said, Trump “will have adopted the pattern of past administra­tions where they just kick the can down the road on these very tough issues.”

The one difference, Paul noted, is that Trump has made extensive use of tariffs and has kept most of them in place as leverage for future talks. That could push more U.S. multinatio­nals with operations in China to look for new places for production and supplies, mostly in other parts of Asia.

At the same time, tariffs and retaliator­y duties have not only squeezed farmers, but also caused a shrinking of business spending in the U.S. and volatility in stock markets.

“It’s going to take an allout strategy from the administra­tion,” said Paul, and Trump may not want to do anything to risk disrupting financial markets and the broader economy ahead of the November election.

“The deal has some encouragin­g language, but its provisions still leave open questions around the severe structural issues in the U.S.China trade relationsh­ip,” said Nick Marro, an analyst at the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit. “This, combined with likely difficulti­es in implementi­ng many of these commitment­s, suggests that there is a high risk that the deal might fall apart later this year.”

 ?? Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT Trump and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He shake hands before signing the so-called Phase 1 agreement in the East Room at the White House.
Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT Trump and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He shake hands before signing the so-called Phase 1 agreement in the East Room at the White House.
 ?? Yuri Gripas Abaca Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, Beijing’s chief negotiator, arrive to sign a long-sought initial trade agreement at the White House.
Yuri Gripas Abaca Press PRESIDENT TRUMP and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, Beijing’s chief negotiator, arrive to sign a long-sought initial trade agreement at the White House.

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