Yuma Sun

Cease-fire

Trump, Xi OK reset in trade talks

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WASHINGTON — Once again, Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping have hit the reset button in trade talks between the world’s two biggest economies, at least delaying an escalation in tension between the U.S. and China that had financial markets on edge and cast a cloud over the global economy.

But when U.S. and Chinese negotiator­s sit down to work out details, the same difficult task remains: getting China to convince the United States that it will curb its aggressive push to challenge American technologi­cal dominance — and then to live up to its promises.

At the Group of 20 meeting in Osaka, Japan, Trump and Xi agreed to a cease-fire in the trade conflict . Trump said Saturday he would hold off for the “time being” on plans to impose tariffs on $300 billion more in Chinese imports — on top of the $250 billion he’s already targeted. This decision will jumpstart trade talks that stalled last month.

“We’re going to work with China where we left off,” Trump said Saturday. He also said China had agreed to buy more American farm products.

Andy Rothman, an investment strategist with Matthews Asia and a former economic official with the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, said the Trump-Xi meeting was more conciliato­ry than he expected. He was struck by Trump’s use of the term “strategic partner” to describe U.S. relations with China after other administra­tion officials have played up the geopolitic­al rivalry between the two countries.

Addressing another contentiou­s issue, Trump said he will now allow U.S. companies to sell some components to Chinese telecommun­ications giant Huawei, which last month was put on an American blacklist as a threat to national security. Trump said that Huawei will stay on the blacklist, however, and that its future won’t be decided until the end of the trade talks.

Neil Shearing, Londonbase­d chief economist at Capital Economics, predicted that financial markets will rally with relief when they reopen Monday. “But I don’t think this marks the turning of the tide,” he said. “Talks will ebb and flow, but the direction over the next 12 months will be toward renewed escalation because issues around industrial strategy will prove to be so intractabl­e.”

The Trump administra­tion says China is trying to cheat its way to dominance in the cutting-edge technologi­es of the future such as artificial intelligen­ce and quantum computing.

In a report last year, the Office of the United States Trade Representa­tive accused Beijing of resorting to predatory tactics to challenge American technologi­cal supremacy.

These include forcing foreign companies to hand over technology in exchange for access to the Chinese market; subsidizin­g its own companies (especially those owned by the state) while burying foreign firms in regulation­s; providing government money so Chinese firms can buy sensitive foreign technology at abovemarke­t prices; and stealing trade secrets outright.

Eleven rounds of talks failed to end the standoff. The United States has imposed 25% import taxes on $250 billion in Chinese products and threatened to target $300 billion more — a move that would extend the tariffs to virtually everything China ships to the United States.

China has lashed back with tariffs on $110 billion in American goods, focusing on agricultur­al products in a direct and painful shot at Trump supporters in the U.S. farm belt.

The last time Trump and Xi met — in early December at a G-20 gathering in Buenos Aires, Argentina — they also reached a cease-fire that injected new life into the talks. But the momentum didn’t last.

Until May, it appeared that the two countries were slowly closing in on a deal. But then U.S. officials accused their Chinese counterpar­ts of reneging on commitment­s they’d made earlier, and talks broke down.

Getting them back on track could prove difficult. Beijing is reluctant to end subsidies to Chinese companies and to write any commitment­s into Chinese law. The Chinese also want the United States to drop its tariffs as a condition of any deal. But the Trump administra­tion insists on keeping tariffs to use as leverage to make sure that China keeps its promises.

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