Bangkok Post

US-China trade truce may not last

Professor: Difference­s remain unresolved

- ANDREW MAYEDA KEVIN HAMLIN

WASHINGTON/BEIJING: The United States and China declared a truce in their trade dispute over the weekend, but that will prove temporary if the world’s two largest economies fail to deliver on their vague commitment­s to re-balance trade.

“We’re putting the trade war on hold,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Sunday after the two sides released a joint statement a day earlier. “Right now, we have agreed to put the tariffs on hold while we execute the framework.”

For now, Mnuchin’s cease-fire declaratio­n will soothe the nerves of investors worried that the world’s two biggest economies were on the verge of an all-out trade conflict.

But the statement — released on Saturday after two days of talks between Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and senior American officials, including Trump — isn’t seen as a panacea to the months-long conflict.

“The truce is little more than a brief deescalati­on of tensions,” said Eswar Prasad, a trade policy at Cornell University and former head of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Chin professor a unit. “The fundamenta­l difference­s on trade and other economic issues remain unresolved.”

During the talks, China and the US agreed to “substantia­lly” reduce the US trade deficit in goods with China. Beijing promised to “significan­tly” increase purchases of US goods and services, but there was no dollar figure attached, despite White House assurances that China would cave to its demand for a $200 billion annual reduction in the trade gap.

China’s state media put a positive spin on the outcome, citing an interview with Liu in Washington on Saturday in which he said the sides agreed avoid trade war and “stop slapping tariffs against each other,” the Xinhua News Agency said.

That people in both nations think their country lost shows the agreement is relatively fair and a win-win for each side, the Global Times said in a commentary Monday.

President Donald Trump has an important strategic reason for removing the tariff threat against China: he needs Beijing’s cooperatio­n as he prepares for an historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore on June 12. It’s hard to imagine a peace deal with North Korea without the involvemen­t of China, Kim’s most important political and economic ally.

If trade talks with China fizzle, the president may soon feel pressure to clamp down again, especially with congressio­nal elections looming in November.

In their efforts to save the party’s majorities in the House and Senate, Republican­s will lean hard on Trump after his fiery anti-China rhetoric and promises to help the working class in states like Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia resonated with voters.

“As this process continues, the United States may use all of its legal tools to protect our technology through tariffs, investment restrictio­ns and export regulation­s,” US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said in a statement on Sunday. “Real structural change is necessary. Nothing less than the future of tens of millions of American jobs is at stake.”

Trump remains preoccupie­d with the US trade deficit and that will be difficult to shrink in the short term.

It’s unclear how Beijing will ramp up buying of American products, even though the one-party state exerts greater control than most government­s over the spending decisions of companies.

“It’s difficult to contemplat­e how the two countries could cut their trade imbalance by $200 billion,’’ said Victor Shih, a professor at the University of California in San Diego who studies China’s politics and finance.

“Even with a drastic reallocati­on of Chinese imports of energy, raw materials and airplanes in favour of the US, the bilateral trade deficit may reduce by $100 billion,” he said Shih. “A $200 billion reduction would mean a drastic reduction in Chinese exports to the US and a dramatic restructur­ing of the supply chain.”

The US made little progress forcing China to respect American intellectu­al property — the issue that caused the US to threaten tariffs in the first place.

The joint statement said only that both sides “attach paramount importance to intellectu­al-property protection­s,” and agreed to cooperate more.

China will change its laws and regulation­s in this area, including its patent law, according to the statement.

The statement also didn’t mention additional US demands, including a halt to subsidies and other government support for the Made in China 2025 plan that targets strategic industries from robotics to new-energy vehicles.

And there was no mention of Chinese telecommun­ications maker ZTE Corp, facing a death sentence after it was cut off from American suppliers for allegedly lying to the US government after flouting sanctions. Trump raised eyebrows last week when he instructed officials to give the company a lifeline.

“The statement was very short and general, and lacked specifics,” said Louis Kuijs, chief Asia economist at Oxford Economics in Hong Kong. “The broader tension is not resolved.”

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