The Telegram (St. John's)

Old tensions resurface

U.S., China still differ on trade, even after friendly summit

- BY PAUL WISEMAN AND JOSH BOAK

Cake and conversati­on, it seems, can go only so far to mend longstandi­ng economic rifts between the United States and China.

Three months after President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, shared chocolate cake at an amiable summit in Florida, tensions between the world’s two biggest economies are flaring again.

Just as officials of the two nations prepare to meet Wednesday in Washington, the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g slapping tariffs on steel imports, a step that risks igniting a trade war. For the United States, it’s a perilous option to address a problem caused largely by China’s overproduc­tion of steel.

And Trump is criticizin­g China again for failing to use its economic leverage to rein in its neighbour and ally, the nuclear rogue state North Korea.

Could this week’s U.s.-china Comprehens­ive Dialogue produce a meaningful breakthrou­gh in economic relations?

Most China watchers are skeptical.

“I’m not looking for anything worthwhile,” says Derek Scissors, a China specialist at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute.

For one thing, the points of difference between the two countries run deep. For another, Xi faces political pressures at home and won’t want to cause a stir in Beijing.

For all the tensions between the two nations, Trump’s words about Xi himself have remained warm. He has suggested that the personal bond he formed with Xi when the two met April 6-7 at Trump’s Mar-a-lago resort can overcome fundamenta­l difference­s on trade and national security. Last week, the president called his Chinese counterpar­t a “friend of mine,” “a terrific guy“and “a very special person.“

At a White House event Monday, Trump suggested that the relationsh­ip is so strong that he asked during the Florida summit to start exporting U.S. beef to China and that the request was quickly granted.

Trump said that the beef industry was so pleased to return to China after a 14-year ban that one executive from Nebraska “hugged me, he wanted to kiss me so badly.”

“We welcome this opportunit­y,” Kenny Graner, a North Dakota cattle farmer who is president of the U.S. Cattlemen’s Associatio­n, says of the China market. “They have a middle class that’s growing in income. It’s big, a lot of people.”

After the meeting, the president softened his accusation­s of abusive Chinese practices, dropped his threat to label China a currency manipulato­r and expressed optimism that China would pressure North Korea to scale back its nuclear program.

Still, the Trump-xi relationsh­ip has yet to deliver the substantiv­e changes that Trump the candidate had promised voters — a core piece of his mantra to put “America first.” The economic irritants are likely to vex U.S. and Chinese officials this week.

Trump had campaigned on a promise to shrink America’s trade deficits, which he blames for wiping out American factories and manufactur­ing jobs. The United States last year ran a trade deficit in goods with China of $347 billion, the amount by which imports exceeded exports. It’s by far the widest gap that U.S. has with any country. Trump says China unfairly subsidizes exports.

Take steel. From 2000 to 2016,

China accelerate­d steel production, raising its share of the world market from 15 per cent to nearly 50 per cent. As Chinese steel poured into the market, global prices fell, hurting American steelmaker­s. Scissors notes that China has long promised to stop subsidizin­g steel and to slow production but hasn’t delivered.

The Trump administra­tion responded by invoking a little-used weapon in American trade law that lets the president tax or restrict imports — if a U.S. Commerce Department investigat­ion finds that they imperil national security. (The result of Commerce’s investigat­ion of steel imports is expected soon.) The rationale was that the American military relies on steel for airplanes, ships and other equipment. Steel also goes into roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture.

The problem is that the United States already blocks most Chinese steel imports. So any tariffs or limits on imports would instead hurt other countries, including such staunch allies as Canada and South Korea.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this July 8 photo, U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping arrive for a meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany. After a cordial meeting between Trump and Xi in April, tensions are simmering again...
AP PHOTO In this July 8 photo, U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping arrive for a meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany. After a cordial meeting between Trump and Xi in April, tensions are simmering again...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada