Trade talks resume
WASHINGTON - US and Chinese deputy trade negotiators launched a new round of talks on Monday aimed at resolving the two nations’ 15-month trade war, with neither side showing any signs of giving ground.
About 30 Chinese officials, led by Vice Finance Minister Liao Min, entered the US Trade Representative’s office for two days of negotiations, to be followed by the first minister-level trade talks in more than two months.
The White House officially confirmed that the high-level talks, involving Chinese vice premier Liu He, US trade representative Robert Lighthizer and treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin would begin on Thursday.
“The two sides will look to build on the deputy-level talks of the past weeks. Topics of discussion will include forced technology transfer, intellectual property rights, services, non-tariff barriers, agriculture, and enforcement,” White House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham said in a statement.
The talks are getting underway about a week before a scheduled increase in US tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods, to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.
US President Donald Trump has said the tariff increase would take effect if no progress was made in the negotiations.
The two sides have been at loggerheads over US demands that China improve protections of American intellectual property, end cyber theft and the forced transfer of technology to Chinese firms, curb industrial subsidies and increase US companies’ access to largely closed Chinese markets.
Mr Trump launched a new round of tariffs after the last high-level talks in late July failed to result in agricultural purchases or yield progress on substantive issues.
Reuters and other media outlets reported late last month that the Trump administration was considering ways to restrict US portfolio investment flows into China, including the possible de-listing of Chinese firms from US stock exchanges — a move that would mark a major escalation in the dispute between the world’s two largest economies.