The Herald (Zimbabwe)

China wants trade talks with US to be equal

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BEIJING. — Trade talks between the United States and China should be equal and mutually beneficial, Chinese Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said on Friday, adding that he hoped the two countries can find ways to manage their difference­s through dialogue.

US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping are expected to hold talks during the G20 summit in Buenos Aires next week as trade ties between the world’s two largest economies become increasing­ly fraught.

“We hope that, on the basis of equal consultati­ons, mutual benefits and trust, we could make common efforts to manage difference­s and find ways to resolve problems,” Wang told a news conference in Beijing, the capital.

Officials of both countries were in close contact, instructed by their leaders, he added.

Washington wants Beijing to improve market access and intellectu­al property protection­s for US firms, cut industrial subsidies and slash a $375 billion trade gap. Trump has imposed tariffs on $250 billion of Chinese imports to force concession­s.

The US tariff rate on $200 billion in Chinese goods is set to increase to 25 percent from 10 percent on Jan. 1. Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on all remaining Chinese imports — about $267 billion more in goods — if Beijing fails to address US demands.

Trump said on Thursday he hoped he could make a deal with China when he meets Xi.

“I can say this, China wants to make a deal very badly — because of the tariffs,” Trump told reporters in the town of Palm Beach in Florida.

“China wants to make a deal; if we can make a deal, we will,” he said.

The high-stakes meeting comes as the Trump administra­tion shows little sign of backing down in its demands and rhetoric.

Washington said on Tuesday China had failed to alter its “unfair” practices at the heart of the dispute, in an update of the US Trade Representa­tive’s “Section 301” investigat­ion into its intellectu­al property and technology transfer policies.

Rising protection­ism

China hopes the G20 meeting could uphold its stance against protection­ism, at a time of slowing growth in global trade and declining foreign direct investment.

On Tuesday, a top Chinese diplomat said an APEC summit’s failure to agree on a communique resulted from certain countries “excusing” protection­ism, a veiled criticism of Washington’s tariffs.

“Currently, global trade faces a complex situation, unilateral­ism and protection­ism are rising fiercely, adding to big uncertaint­ies for global economic developmen­t,” Wang said.

“We hope the summit could further strengthen consensus of all sides on supporting multilater­alism.”

China supports reform of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) to boost its effectiven­ess and authority, he added.

China rejected the fresh US accusation­s of perpetuati­ng “unfair” trade practices and urged Washington to stop provocatio­ns.

China’s commerce ministry said it was deeply concerned by the report the US administra­tion issued this week.

Citing security concerns, the US government last week also proposed stepping up scrutiny over technology exports in 14 key areas, including artificial intelligen­ce and microproce­ssors, a move many analysts view as directly targeting China.

A 30-day public consultati­on period on plans to wrap those sectors in its broader export control regime ends on December 19, the US government’s Federal Register shows.

Xi will visit Argentina, Panama, Portugal and Spain from November 27 to December 5. — Reuters.

 ??  ?? Chinese Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen
Chinese Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen

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