Arab Times

China confident it can clinch trade pact with US

Trump tweets there’ll either be major deal or no deal

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SHANGHAI, Dec 5, (RTRS): China expressed confidence on Wednesday that it can reach a trade deal with the United States, a sentiment echoed by US President Donald Trump a day after he warned of more tariffs if the two sides could not resolve their difference­s.

The remarks, by the Chinese Commerce Ministry, follow a period of relative quiet from Beijing after Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping reached a temporary truce in their trade war at a meeting over dinner in Argentina on Saturday.

In a brief statement, the ministry said China would try to work quickly to implement specific items already agreed upon, as both sides “actively promote the work of negotiatio­ns within 90 days in accordance with a clear timetable and road map”.

“We are confident in implementa­tion,” it said, calling the latest bilateral talks “very successful”.

Trump, in a post on Twitter, linked Beijing’s silence to officials’ travels and said he thought Xi had been sincere during their weekend meeting to hammer out progress over trade.

“Very strong signals being sent by China once they returned home from their long trip, including stops, from Argentina. Not to sound naive or anything, but I believe President Xi meant every word of what he said at our long and hopefully historic meeting. ALL subjects discussed!” Trump wrote on Wednesday.

The US president a day earlier had said the ceasefire could be extended but warned tariffs would be back on the table if the talks failed and that he would only accept a “real deal” with China.

China’s Foreign Ministry referred specific questions to the Commerce Ministry, which is due to hold its weekly news briefing on Thursday in Beijing.

“We hope the two working teams from both sides can, based on the consensus reached between the two countries’ leaders, strengthen consultati­ons, and reach a mutually beneficial agreement soon,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters.

The threat of further escalation in the trade war between the world’s two largest economies has loomed large over financial markets and the global economy for much of the year, and investors initially greeted the ceasefire with relief.

The mood has quickly soured, however, on scepticism that the two sides can reach a substantiv­e deal on a host of highly divisive issues within the 90-day negotiatin­g period, and markets continued to slide on Wednesday in part from confusion over the ceasefire’s lack of detail.

Failure would raise the spectre of a major escalation in the trade battle, with fresh US tariff action and Chinese retaliatio­n possibly as early as March.

The White House has said China had committed to start buying more American products and lifting tariff and non-tariff barriers immediatel­y, while beginning talks on structural changes with respect to forced technology transfers and intellectu­al property protection.

Sources told Reuters that Chinese oil trader Unipec plans to resume buying US crude by March after the Xi-Trump deal reduced the risk of tariffs on those imports. China’s crude oil imports from the US had ground to a halt.

Global financial markets sank to one-week lows on Wednesday amid the renewed trade concerns, extending TUSay’s slide.

US markets were closed on Wednesday to observe former President George H.W. Bush’s death, but the effect of Wall Street’s turmoil the previous day was felt in Europe and Asia with the benchmark Shanghai stock index closing down 0.6 percent.

“Narrow agreements and modest concession­s in the ongoing trade dispute will not bridge the wide gulf in their respective economic, political and strategic interests,” Moody’s Investors Service said in a report that predicted US-China relations “will remain contentiou­s”.

Officials from the United States and a number of other major economies have often criticised China for its slow approach to negotiatio­ns and not following through on commitment­s.

China has said comparativ­ely little about the Trump-Xi agreement after senior Chinese officials briefed the media following the meeting, and US and Chinese accounts of what the deal entails have sometimes differed.

“Officials now face the difficult task of fleshing out a deal that is acceptable to the Chinese but also involves significan­t enough concession­s not to be torpedoed by the China hawks in the Trump administra­tion,” Capital Economics said in a note this week, adding that higher tariffs could simply be delayed.

A Chinese official told Reuters that officials were “waiting for the leaders to return” before publicisin­g details.

President Xi and his most senior officials are due back in China on Thursday, having visited Panama and Portugal since leaving Argentina. On Wednesday, the Global Times tabloid, which is run by the Chinese Communist Party’s main newspaper, said the Trump administra­tion’s statements about the deal - including the agreement that China would buy $1.2 trillion in additional US goods - were designed to highlight or even exaggerate facets of the deal that benefited the United States.

“It will be a win-win situation if a deal is realised. But if not, more fights and talks will continue alternatel­y for a longer while. Chinese society should maintain a calm attitude,” it said.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows the logo of the Tesla model S at the Paris Auto Show in Paris, France. The Autopilot system on a Telsa Model S may have helped the California Highway Patrol stop the car after its driver fell asleep on a freeway. (AP)
This file photo shows the logo of the Tesla model S at the Paris Auto Show in Paris, France. The Autopilot system on a Telsa Model S may have helped the California Highway Patrol stop the car after its driver fell asleep on a freeway. (AP)

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