Khaleej Times

US-China trade tension dominates IMF meeting

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washington — Trade tensions between the United States and China, which threaten to spill over into the global economy, are dominating a gathering of world finance officials even as the Group of 20 avoided the topic on Friday.

Official after official has called for disputes to be resolved through dialogue rather than unilateral tariffs, and warned about the threat to the economic recovery.

French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire criticised what he called a “vain and pointless” spat with China. “We run the risk of trade war. We run the risk of multilater­al order breaking down that is good for no one, and most definitely not for the world economy and growth,” Le Maire told reporters during the spring meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

But US President Donald Trump’s top finance official said the fault lies with countries that employ unfair trade policies.

“We strongly believe that unfair global trade practices impede stronger US and global growth, acting as a persistent drag on the global economy,” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement to the IMF.

While IMF chief Christine Lagarde has offered the fund as a forum to resolve difference­s, Mnuchin instead said the IMF “should be a strong voice” in urging members “to dismantle trade and non-tariff barriers and to protect intellectu­al property rights.”

Le Maire agreed China must respect the rules, but said the country is a key part of the world trading system. “We must redefine internatio­nal trade with China, not against China.”

Theft of American intellectu­al property and technology has been a key irritant in the dispute with Beijing, which prompted President Donald Trump to announce steep tariffs on tens of billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese goods, on top of last month’s punitive duties on steel that were primarily targeted at China as well.

Washington and Beijing have traded tariff threats and also filed complaints against each other at the World Trade Organisati­on.

WTO Director Roberto Azevedo warned that the effects of a major escalation “could be serious,” and poor countries would be the collateral damage.

 ?? — AFP ?? Bruno Le Maire and Christine Lagarde at the 2018 IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Washington, DC.
— AFP Bruno Le Maire and Christine Lagarde at the 2018 IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Washington, DC.

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