Stabroek News

Trump says ‘I think we’ll make a deal with China’ on trade

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said yesterday that he will likely make a deal with China on trade, adding that a lot of progress had been made to resolve the two countries’ difference­s but warning that he still may impose more tariffs on Chinese goods.

“China very much wants to make a deal,” Trump told reporters in Washington just hours after his top economic adviser expressed caution about talk of a possible U.S.China trade agreement.

“We’ve had a very good discussion­s with China, we’re getting much closer to doing something,” Trump said before departing the White House for a campaign event.

“I spoke with President Xi (Jinping) yesterday. They very much want to make a deal,” Trump said.

“I think we’ll make a deal with China, and I think it will be a very fair deal for everybody, but it will be a good deal for the United States.”

Trump said he will discuss trade with Xi when the two meet for dinner on the sidelines of the G20 leaders’ summit at the end of November in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

His administra­tion has demanded that Beijing make sweeping changes to its policies on intellectu­al property protection­s, technology transfers, industrial subsidies and domestic market access, along with steps to reduce a $375 billion U.S. goods trade deficit with China.

Trump said a deal with China would also be good for Beijing.

“If we can open up China and make it fair, for the first

time ever — this should have done years ago by other presidents but it wasn’t — I am very much willing to do it. But China very much wants to make a deal,” he said.

Trump’s comments came a day after a phone call with Xi that he described as “very good.”.

The president’s remarks helped U.S. stocks to trim their losses on a day that started with market optimism over a Bloomberg report quoting unnamed sources as saying that Trump had ordered his cabinet to draw up terms for a China trade deal.

But by midday, shares had turned negative, weighed down by Apple Inc.’s disappoint­ing earnings forecast and comments from White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow that he was less optimistic than previously about a deal between Washington and Beijing.

Kudlow, speaking on CNBC, contradict­ed the Bloomberg report and added: “There’s no mass movement, there’s no huge thing. We’re not on the cusp of a deal.”

One of China’s vice commerce ministers Wang Bingnan said on Saturday the country is willing to resolve trade issues with the United States through mutually respectful talks and on an equal footing, similar to past comments from Beijing.

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