The Korea Times

Trump says China trade pact on track for Nov.

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China is seeking $2.4 billion in retaliator­y sanctions against the United States for failing to comply with a World Trade Organizati­on ruling in a case that highlights White House complaints about the global trade body.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said efforts to end a U.S. trade war with China were going well as the world’s two largest economies continued to battle over trade and politics across the world despite heralding a long-awaited truce this month.

Trump last week said he hopes that the first phase of a trade deal announced earlier in October will be signed by the middle of next month.

“The deal with China’s coming along very well. They want to make a deal,” Trump told reporters before a Cabinet meeting, stressing the toll that U.S. tariffs have taken on the Chinese economy. “They sort of have to make a deal … because their supply chain is going down the tubes.”

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer told reporters the administra­tion still aimed to finalize a deal on the first phase of the deal in time for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meetings in Chile on Nov. 16 and 17, but said there were still outstandin­g issues to resolve.

He said deputy-level meetings took place on Monday, and he and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin would speak with their counterpar­ts on Friday.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross also sought to temper expectatio­ns that a deal would be completed next month, telling Fox Business Network that timing was less important than making “the right deal.”

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow told the network that 15 percent U.S. tariffs on many consumer goods imported from China, including cellphones, laptop and tablet computers, could be withdrawn if negotiatio­ns continue to go well.

Earlier this month, the administra­tion held off on raising tariffs on another $250 billion of Chinese goods to 30 percent from 25 percent.

Tit-for-tat tariffs imposed by the United States and China over the past 15 months have roiled financial markets and resulted in a sharp drag on global economic growth.

Pressure is mounting by the internatio­nal community for the United States and China to work out their difference­s.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund last week forecast that fallout from the U.S.-China trade war and trade disputes across the world will slow global growth in 2019 to 3.0 percent, the slowest pace in a decade.

While key officials in the Trump administra­tion are working on a trade deal with Beijing, others continue to hammer Beijing on other issues, raising questions about how well the administra­tion is coordinati­ng its China policy.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday said it was “completely inappropri­ate” for China to retaliate against U.S. businesses for commenting on pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

Positive steps in the trade talks also did not stop China from seeking $2.4 billion in retaliator­y sanctions against the United States for non-compliance with a World Trade

Organizati­on ruling in a case dating to the Obama era.

China seeking $2.4 bil. in sanctions against US

GENEVA (Reuters) — China is seeking $2.4 billion in retaliator­y sanctions against the United States for failing to comply with a World Trade Organizati­on ruling in a case that highlights White House complaints about the global trade body.

The WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) will review the case which dates back to the Obama-era on Oct. 28, a document published on Monday showed.

WTO appeals judges said in July the United States did not fully comply with a trade body ruling about tariffs it put on Chinese solar panels, wind towers, and steel cylinders. They said Beijing could impose retaliator­y sanctions if Washington did not remove them.

Washington has challenged the validity of the WTO ruling and could dispute the $2.4 billion in retaliator­y sanctions, sending the matter to arbitratio­n.

The dispute comes as the Trump administra­tion, which is pushing the WTO to revamp rules allowing China to call itself a “developing country,” battles Beijing in a wider trade war.

U.S. officials argue China benefits from easier treatment at the WTO, while subsidizin­g manufactur­ed goods and dumping them on world markets.

The WTO’s dispute body effectivel­y gave Beijing a green light to seek compensato­ry sanctions in mid-August. The United States said at the time that it did not view the WTO findings as valid and that the judges had applied “the wrong legal interpreta­tion in this dispute.”

China continued to be the “serial offender” of the WTO’s subsidies agreement, the U.S. delegation said then. U.S. officials in Washington and Geneva had no further comment on Monday.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, right, and others listen as economic adviser Larry Kudlow, center, speaks before a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., Monday.
AFP-Yonhap U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, right, and others listen as economic adviser Larry Kudlow, center, speaks before a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., Monday.

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