Business World

United States-China trade talks to resume this week

Trump says may extend March 1 deal deadline at same tariff rate

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BEIJING/WASHINGTON — The United States and China will resume trade talks this week in Washington with time running short to ease their bruising trade war, but US President Donald Trump repeated on Friday that he may extend a March 1 deadline for a deal and keep tariffs on Chinese goods from rising.

Both the United States and China reported progress in five days of negotiatio­ns in Beijing last week.

Trump, speaking at a White House news conference, said the United States was closer than ever before to “having a real trade deal” with China and said he would be “honored” to remove tariffs if an agreement can be reached.

But he added that the talks were “very complicate­d.”

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said in a statement on Friday the two economic superpower­s “will continue working on all outstandin­g issues in advance of the March 1, 2019, deadline.

“These detailed and intensive discussion­s led to progress between the two parties. Much work remains, however,” Ms. Sanders said about the Beijing talks.

She added that the two countries agreed to state any commitment­s they make in a memorandum of understand­ing. China’s Vice Premier and chief trade negotiator Liu He and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer would be leading the talks in Washington, a White House source said.

US duties on $200 billion in imports from China are set to rise to 25% from 10% if no deal is reached by March 1 to address US demands that China curb forced technology transfers and better enforce intellectu­al property rights.

SAME TARIFF RATE

Mr. Trump, asked whether he would grant Beijing a 60-day extension to the deadline, said: “There is a possibilit­y that I will extend the date. But if I do that — if I see that we’re close to a deal or the deal is going in the right direction — I would do that at the same tariffs that we’re charging now, I would not increase the tariffs.”

Mr. Trump also said he would consider bringing top US Democrats — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer — into the final stages of the talks to minimize their dissent with the deal. Spokespers­ons for the two lawmakers did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The conclusion of the Beijing talks prompted optimism on Wall Street, where major stock indexes ended higher.

The US-China Business Council, which represents American companies doing business in China, applauded the announceme­nt that the two sides would put specific language in a memorandum of understand­ing and said its existence could cause the Mr. Trump to push back deadline.

“It does appear that enough progress has been made to possibly extend the deadline,” said Craig Allen, president of the Washington-based group. “The memorandum of understand­ing might not finish all the details, but if it contained the final picture ... that would be a huge step forward.”

Chinese state news agency Xinhua said on Friday that China and the US had reached a “consensus in principle” on some key issues, adding they had a detailed discussion on a memorandum of understand­ing on trade and economic issues. It gave no details.

The countries focused this week on technology, intellectu­al property rights, agricultur­e, services, non-tariff barriers and currency, and discussed potential Chinese purchases of US goods and services to reduce a “large and persistent bilateral trade deficit,” Ms. Sanders said.

MEETING WITH XI

Chinese President Xi Jinping met Lighthizer and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday after a week of talks at senior and deputy levels, and called for a deal both sides could accept, Chinese state media said.

After talks on Thursday, Mr. Mnuchin said on Twitter that he and Mr. Lighthizer had held “productive meetings” with Mr. Xi’s top economic adviser, Liu He.

“The consultati­ons between the two sides’ teams achieved important step-by-step progress,” Mr. Xi said, according to state television.

“I hope you will continue efforts to advance reaching a mutually beneficial, win-win agreement,” Mr. Xi said at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People.

He added that China was willing to take a “cooperativ­e approach” to settling bilateral trade frictions.

Messrs. Lighthizer told Xi the senior officials had “two very good days” of talks.

“We feel that we have made headway on very, very important, and very difficult issues. We have additional work to do but we are hopeful,” Mr. Lighthizer told Mr. Xi in a pool video shown to foreign media.

‘A LOT OF DISTANCE’

Neither country has offered new details on how they might de-escalate the tariff war that has roiled financial markets and disrupted manufactur­ing supply chains.

Although Mr. Trump said this week that an extension of the tariff deadline was possible if a “real deal” was close, Larry Kudlow, director of the US National Economic Council, has said the White House had made no such decision.

But several sources informed about the meetings told Reuters there was little indication negotiator­s had made major progress on sticking points to pave the way for a potential meeting between Xi and Trump in coming weeks to hammer out a deal.

“Stalemate on the important stuff,” said one source. All of the sources requested anonymity because the talks are confidenti­al.

“There’s still a lot of distance between parties on structural and enforcemen­t issues,” said a second source. “I wouldn’t quite call it hitting a wall, but it’s not a field of dreams either.”

A third source told Reuters the White House was “irate” over earlier reports that the Trump administra­tion was considerin­g a 60-day extension of the tariff deadline. —

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