National Post

EXTENSION 2.0

MARK CARNEY REPORTEDLY ASKED TO STAY ON AT BANK OF ENGLAND FOR SECOND TIME, TO 2020.

- eNda cuRRaN

HONG KONG • The Trump administra­tion is putting trade negotiatio­ns with China on the back burner while focusing first on resolving issues in the North American hemisphere, reaching a breakthrou­gh agreement between the U.S. and Mexico.

The White House believes it’s important to resolve trade disputes in “our own neighbourh­ood” quickly and favourably, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Fox Business News on Tuesday. Ross said President Donald Trump’s position is that it’s currently not the best time for negotiatio­ns with China, denting expectatio­ns of a fast resolution.

National Economic Council director Larry Kudlow called the pact with Mexico “a very growthy trade deal” in an interview Tuesday with Fox News, adding that it holds lessons for Chinese negotiator­s.

“What I’ll say about China, finally, wrap up: our deal with Mexico shows that free trade, fair trade can be done,” he said. “That a pro-growth trade deal can be made.”

Speaking to reporters Monday, Trump said he is rejecting overtures from China to negotiate as he tries to achieve a less “one-sided” trade policy.

“They want to talk,” Trump said. But “it’s just not the right time to talk right now, to be honest.”

Trump’s remarks are his latest in recent weeks to suggest he doesn’t see a quick end to trade tensions with China, stoking concerns in Beijing that his actions are part of a wider plan to contain the nation’s rise. Fears are growing that the spat between the world’s biggest economies may spill over into geopolitic­al flash points, from North Korea to Taiwan.

Negotiatio­ns between the U.S. and China have been stalled since May, when Trump put a stop to a deal for China to buy more energy and agricultur­al goods to narrow the trade deficit. After mid-level trade talks in Washington last week ended with no agreement, a person familiar with the discussion­s said Chinese officials had raised the prospect of suspending talks until after U.S. congressio­nal elections in November.

The U.S. and Mexico agreed to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement and Trump called on Canada to join the deal soon or risk being left out. While share prices for South Korean and Japanese automakers gained amid expectatio­ns of reduced tariff risk, Mexico’s peso weakened 0.4 per cent against the dollar in Asian trading on Tuesday, paring about half its Monday climb.

“It could be because a dose of reality is sinking in after the initial euphoria,” said Mitul Kotecha, senior emerging-markets strategist in Singapore at TD Securities.

“There is still some way to go before the deal is concluded, including political hurdles in both the U.S. and Mexico and the question of how Canada will be added to a broader deal.”

The Mexico breakthrou­gh will embolden Trump’s trade hawks to double down on demands for concession­s from China, according Rob Carnell and Prakash Sakpal, economists at ING Bank NV in Singapore.

“So as far as China and Asia are concerned, this new Mexico deal solves nothing,” they wrote in a note. “It strengthen­s the U.S. position to play hard-ball with China. This doesn’t look good for the region.”

Because the nature of the dispute between China and the U.S. is more complex, officials in Beijing are likely of the view that it is much tougher to resolve, Amy Celico, principal of Albright Stonebridg­e Group and previously senior director for China Affairs at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive, told Bloomberg Television.

“For U.S.-China trade, it is going to be much more difficult to come to a short-term resolution, particular­ly if we sit back for a minute and look at some of the rhetoric coming out of this administra­tion,” Celico said. “The hawks are certainly in the ascendancy on China trade policy.”

Meetings between Chinese and U.S. officials in Washington last week made little headway, setting the stage for the U.S. to push ahead with the next round of tariffs on up to US$200-billion worth of Chinese goods. Beijing has said it would retaliate.

The two days of talks led by U.S. Treasury Undersecre­tary for Internatio­nal Affairs David Malpass and ViceCommer­ce Minister Wang Shouwen marked the first major interactio­n between the two sides since June.

Trump wants to shrink a US$375-billion goods deficit with China and Beijing to unwind industrial subsidies and scale back its “Made in China 2025” plan to lead the world in industries such as artificial intelligen­ce and robotics. So far, there’s been little indication of compromise.

Still, Trump did hold the door open for an eventual resolution with China.

“It’s been too one-sided for too many years, for too many decades and so it’s not the right time to talk,” he says, “But eventually I’m sure that we’ll be able to work out a deal with China.”

HAWKS ARE CERTAINLY IN THE ASCENDANCY ON CHINA TRADE.

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 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The White House believes it’s important to resolve trade disputes in “our own neighbourh­ood” quickly and favourably, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Fox Business News on Tuesday.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / THE CANADIAN PRESS The White House believes it’s important to resolve trade disputes in “our own neighbourh­ood” quickly and favourably, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Fox Business News on Tuesday.

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