Khaleej Times

China has ‘good faith’ to fix trade issues

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beijing — China has the “good faith” to work with the United States to resolve trade frictions, the Foreign Ministry said on Monday, as the world’s two largest economies resumed talks in a bid to end their trade dispute.

US officials are meeting their counterpar­ts in Beijing this week for the first face-to-face talks since US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping agreed in December to a 90-day truce in a trade war that has roiled global markets.

Trump said on Sunday that trade talks with China were going very well and that weakness in the Chinese economy gave Beijing a reason to work toward a deal.

The two sides agreed to hold “positive and constructi­ve” dialogue to resolve economic and trade disputes in accordance with the consensus reached by the countries’ leaders, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters at a regular news briefing. “From the beginning we have believed that China-US trade friction is not a positive situation for either country or the world economy. China has the good faith, on the basis of mutual respect and equality, to resolve the bilateral trade frictions,” Lu said.

The United States and China are likely to reach a good settlement over immediate trade issues while agreement on structural trade issues and enforcemen­t will be harder, U.S. Secretary of Commerce

Wilbur Ross said on Monday as US-China trade talks resumed.

Ross, in an interview on CNBC, said the talks in Beijing would help determine whether trade difference­s between the world’s two largest economies could be resolved through negotiatio­ns.

“I think there’s a very good chance that we will get a reasonable settlement that China can live

with, that we can live with and that addresses all of the key issues. And to me those are immediate trade. That’s probably the easiest one to solve,” Ross said.

Trump imposed import tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese goods last year and has threatened more to pressure Beijing to change its practices on issues ranging from industrial subsidies to intellectu­al property to hacking. China has retaliated with tariffs of its own.

“As for whether the Chinese economy is good or not, I have already explained this. China’s developmen­t has ample tenacity and huge potential,” Lu said. “We have firm confidence in the strong longterm fundamenta­ls of the Chinese economy.”

Lu also said that Vice President Wang Qishan would attend the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d in late January, but added that he had not yet heard of any arrangemen­ts for a meeting with Trump there.

By Monday afternoon, few details had emerged of the talks, which were scheduled to run through Tuesday.

The US delegation, led by Deputy US Trade Representa­tive Jeffrey Gerrish, includes under secretarie­s from the US Department­s of Agricultur­e, Commerce, Energy and Treasury, as well as senior officials from the White House.

Tu Xinquan, a Chinese trade expert at Beijing’s University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, told Reuters before talks began that the meetings would likely focus on technical issues and leave major disagreeme­nts to more senior officials.

“China’s economy is significan­tly slowing down, and the U.S. stock market is declining quickly. I think the two sides need some kind of agreement for now,” Tu said.

Good settlement

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