The Columbus Dispatch

Trump, Xi agree to hold off on tariff hikes

- By David J. Lynch

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — President Donald Trump agreed to cancel a planned Jan. 1 tariff increase on Chinese products during a dinner meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday, in return for what the White House called purchases of a “very substantia­l” amount of Amercan farm, energy, and industrial goods.

The limited bargain will see the U.S. and China restart talks aimed at resolving a trade dispute that is damaging the global economy, worrying some of Trump’s Republican allies, and unnerving investors.

The two leaders struck the deal during a roughly 2½-hour dinner meeting on the sidelines of the Summit of G-20 leaders that saw them personally engage in several of the greatest irritants in the U.S.-China relationsh­ip.

The two sides agreed to “immediatel­y” begin talks on Chinese industrial policies, including coercive licensing of U.S. technology, trade secret theft and nontariff trade barriers.

“This was an amazing and productive meeting with unlimited possibilit­ies for both the United States and China,” Trump said in a statement issued from Air Force One as he returned to Washington. “It is my great honor to be working with President Xi.

But their partial accord left the toughest issues to future bargaining sessions that will attempt to succeed where earlier efforts failed — and under an ambitious 90-day deadline.

Some administra­tion supporters said the talks had made important progress on issues such as cooperatio­n on the North Korean nuclear program and restrictin­g illicit shipments of the addictive opioid fentanyl, China’s President Xi Jinping, left, and President Donald Trump meet over dinner during the G20 Summit on Saturday in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The leaders discussed trade and tariff policy for more than two hours, a White House adviser said.

but did not represent a breakthrou­gh in commercial diplomacy.

“On standard trade issues, this is where we were weeks ago,” said Derek Scissors, a China scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and sometimes adviser to the administra­tion.

While the Trump-Xi duet riveted most attendees here, the G-20 leaders agreed on a communique that reflected shared ambitions in economic developmen­t, finance and trade.

The communique was in harmony with “many of the United States’ biggest objectives,” especially in backing reform of the World Trade Organizati­on, according to a senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on the condition of anonymity.

On climate change, however, the United States remained the lone holdout, with 19 other leaders pledging to implement the Paris accord to fight global warming. The United States instead reiterated Trump’s decision to withdraw from the accord.

G-20 leaders also agreed

that the global trading system “is currently falling short of its objectives” and agreed to take stock of proposed overhauls at next year’s summit in Japan.

But it was the United States and China that dominated the spotlight.

The trade conflict, which has rattled financial markets and upended global supply chains, began this year when Trump imposed tariffs on $253 billion of imported Chinese steel, industrial products and consumer goods, including handbags, furniture and appliances. Chinese officials, caught off guard by the aggressive U.S. moves, retaliated with import taxes on such American products as soybeans, automobile­s and liquefied natural gas.

The Trump administra­tion complains that China treats American companies unfairly in defiance of its obligation­s as a member of the World Trade Organizati­on. In March, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert E. Lighthizer blistered China in a 215-page report accusing it of a comprehens­ive campaign to

acquire and steal advanced U.S. technologi­es.

By generously subsidizin­g its state-owned enterprise­s and coercing American companies to surrender their trade secrets in return for access to the lucrative Chinese market, Beijing seeks to dominate the industries of the future, said Lighthizer.

Despite Trump’s tariffs and months of escalating U.S. complaints, China “has not fundamenta­lly altered its unfair, unreasonab­le, and market-distorting practices,” Lighthizer said last month.

In recent weeks, officials at multiple levels of the two government­s sought to develop a deal to avert additional U.S. tariffs while reinvigora­ted negotiatio­ns over a broader pact began.

Trump and Xi met amid mounting worries that trade fights are underminin­g a weakening global economy. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, said Saturday that “trade tensions have begun to have a negative effect” and are increasing the risk that growth will disappoint.

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[PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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