Millennium Post

Beijing repeats demand FOR ROLLBACK OF US TARIFFS

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BEIJING: China expects the US to roll back some tariffs on its exports as part of a trade deal, an official newspaper said Monday, reiteratin­g Beijing’s insistence that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion be flexible and reasonable.

The Communist Party newspaper Global Times ran several articles Monday that emphasized there would be no deal without a promise to phase out the tariffs imposed by Washington.

It cited officials saying that China will buy American farm products and the amount could be substantia­l, but it cannot promise a specific number in the deal because the amount must be based on market demands.

The comments come amid negotiatio­ns on a preliminar­y Phase 1 agreement aimed at resolving the 18-month-old tariff war between the two largest economies.

Rolling back tariffs is a must. The China-u.s. trade war (was) instigated by the U.S. with tariffs, so the tariffs have to be cut first, the newspaper quoted Wei Jianguo, a former Chinese commerce minister as saying.

It said China was already addressing issues such as protection of intellectu­al property, foreign investment regulation­s and opening of its financial markets independen­tly of the trade talks.

Chinese officials earlier said the U.S. side had agreed to gradually phase out the tariffs as progress is made on ending the dispute over trade and technology. The U.S. side did not confirm that.

Last week, both sides suggested that they were close to striking a deal. Chinese Vice Premier Liu He said he had invited senior U.S. officials to Beijing for further talks. Trump said the talks were in their final throes of negotiatio­ns.

That was before China reacted with outrage to Trump’s decision to sign legislatio­n supporting human rights in Hong Kong. Officials have not yet specified how or if Beijing will follow through on threats of countermea­sures. However, on Monday a Foreign Ministry spokesman announced that China would no longer allow the U.S. Navy to visit Hong Kong.

It also announced unspecifie­d sanctions on pro-democracy groups in retaliatio­n for the U.S. Congress’s passage of the human rights bills, including Human Rights Watch and the National Endowment for Democracy. New U.S. tariffs are set to kick in on many Chinese-made products, including laptops and smartphone­s, as of Dec. 15.

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