The Borneo Post

China confirms negotiator to sign trade deal in US next week

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BEIJING: China said yesterday that Vice Premier Liu He will travel to Washington next week to sign the ‘phase one’ deal with the US that has lowered trade tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.

The signing will cap a nearly two-year spat that threatened to throttle the global economy as the two countries exchanged tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of two-way trade.

Liu, China’s top negotiator in the trade conflict, will be in the US capital from Monday to Wednesday to sign the deal, the commerce ministry said.

Donald Trump announced last week that the two countries would sign the mini agreement — the first part of a wider pact between the two — on Jan 15, but Beijing had yet to confirm the trip.

“At the invitation of the US, Liu He will be leading a delegation to Washington from Jan 13 to Jan 15 to sign the phase one deal,” commerce ministry spokesman Gao Feng said at a weekly news briefing.

“Both parties are in close communicat­ion regarding the detailed arrangemen­t of the signing,” Gao said, without providing more details.

US and Chinese officials have said the agreement includes protection­s for intellectu­al property, food and farm goods, financial services and foreign exchange, and a provision for dispute resolution.

Trump also cancelled plans to impose tariffs on US$160 billion in Chinese merchandis­e in mid-December — including hot consumer items such as mobile phones — but punishing tariffs remain on about US$250 billion-worth of goods, including machinery and many electronic items.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer has said China committed to a minimum of US$200 billion in increased purchases over the next two years from US manufactur­ers, farmers, energy producers and service providers.

But Gao refused to confirm the figure at yesterday’s news conference.

Trump said last week that he would travel to Beijing for negotiatio­ns on the next part of the wider deal “at a later date”, but Gao said he had ‘no further informatio­n on phase two’ of the negotiatio­ns.

Observers say the trade war, which has also had ramificati­ons for other economies globally, may have ushered in a long-term de-coupling of trade relations between the two economic powerhouse­s.

The truce also partially removes a thorn in the side of Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has to deal with a slowing economy and pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.—

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Liu (le ) speaks with Trump during a trade meeting in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC.
— AFP file photo Liu (le ) speaks with Trump during a trade meeting in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC.

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