The Borneo Post

US-China trade pact, a Trump triumph or rehashed news

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WASHINGTON: The new trade agreement unveiled Friday between China and the US is yet another olive branch from the Trump White House to Beijing, but some skeptics wonder how long the cooperativ­e tone will last.

One thing is sure: the initial measures of the 100- day action plan launched in mid-April by China and the US stand in stark contrast with the anti- Chinese rhetoric Donald Trump used on the campaign trail.

The president has significan­tly softened his stance, declining last month to declare China a currency manipulato­r - one of the most strident pledges he made as a candidate.

And, at least at first glance, the new Sino-American trade deal appears to have vindicated this softer approach that is starting to bear fruit.

“We have made... more progress in 40 days than the prior trade negotiator­s had in this century,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said recently on Fox News.

The two-page plan of action calls for the lifting of the 13-year embargo Beijing had kept on American beef, as well as gradually opening the Chinese market to certain US financial services.

“It’s impossible to overstate how beneficial this will be for Ameri- ca’s cattle producers,” said Craig Uden, president of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Associatio­n, adding that he was eager to court 1.4 billion new consumers in China.

As important as they may be, these developmen­ts are not entirely new.

Plans to lift the beef embargo had already been agreed to in principle last September under former President Barack Obama.

The only truly new developmen­t was the plan to speed up direct exports of American liquefied natural gas to China, delighting some in the American hydrocarbo­n industry.

“It’s a strong signal from both government­s that there is a real interest in using LNG produced in the US in China,” Charlie Riedl, director of the Center for Liquefied Natural Gas, told AFP.

As for the Chinese, they got the US to lift trade barriers to Chinese exports of cooked poultry, a concession that does not appear to worry US producers.

“It would serve a niche market and we don’t think that it would be a problem for our domestic industry,” said Jim Sumner, director of the USA Poultry and Egg Export Council.

According to Douglas Paal, a China expert at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, these achievemen­ts are the lowhanging fruit.

“It’s not negative but it’s not a major step,” he said.

“These are the easy steps. The heavy work hasn’t started yet.”

Indeed, the agreement does not touch on theft of intellectu­al property or the American manufactur­ing sector, which has suffered most of all from Chinese competitio­n – and which Trump had promised to rescue on his arrival in the White House.

Imports of Chinese-manufactur­ed goods are neverthele­ss blamed for the colossal US trade gap in goods with China, which stood at US$ 347 billion in 2016. Trump has vowed to reduce it. “For American manufactur­ing, there’s not a lot there although I’m not terribly surprised,” said Scott Paul of the Alliance for American Manufactur­ing. — AFP

We have made... more progress in 40 days than the prior trade negotiator­s had in this century. Wilbur Ross, US Commerce Secretary

 ??  ?? Trump (second left) holds a bilateral meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping (right) at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, US. The new trade agreement unveiled Friday between China and the US is yet another olive branch from the Trump...
Trump (second left) holds a bilateral meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping (right) at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, US. The new trade agreement unveiled Friday between China and the US is yet another olive branch from the Trump...

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