Khaleej Times

Mnuchin hopes for a ‘substantia­l progress’ in trade talks with China

- Ben Blanchard

beijing — US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Tuesday that he hopes to make “substantia­l progress” with Chinese negotiator­s in the next two rounds of trade talks, as the world’s two largest economies look for ways to end their bruising trade war.

Mnuchin was speaking in Beijing, where he and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer will hold talks this week, before Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He goes to Washington next week for another round of talks in what could be the end game for negotiatio­ns.

“We’ve a meeting here, and then the vice premier and team will be coming back to Washington D.C., and we hope to make substantia­l progress in these two meetings,” Mnuchin told reporters.

Beijing and Washington have cited progress on issues including intellectu­al property and forced technology transfer to help end a conflict marked by tit-for-tat tariffs that have cost both sides billions of dollars, disrupted supply chains and roiled financial markets.

But US officials say privately that an enforcemen­t mechanism for a deal and timelines for lifting tariffs are sticking points.

“I’m not going to comment on specific issues of the discussion­s,” Mnuchin said. “They’ve been quite broad as I’ve said before. We’ve made a lot of progress. We look forward to the meetings here.”

At a separate meeting on Tuesday, with a group of former US lawmakers, the Chinese government’s top diplomat, State Councillor Wang Yi, said the two countries’ interests were deeply connected.

“In recent months, both countries’ economic and trade teams have held many rounds of highlevel consultati­ons and achieved much positive progress,” China’s Foreign Ministry paraphrase­d Wang as saying.

China hopes that both sides can “work hard, exclude disturbanc­es, and reach a mutually beneficial, win-win agreement”, he added.

Chinese officials have also acknowledg­ed that they view the enforcemen­t mechanism as crucial, but that it can’t only put restraints on China. “There must be guarantees for implementa­tion. This is an important part of the negotiatio­ns. We must, to the greatest extent possible, lower and prevent the chances of going back on promises,” one Chinese official said.

We’ve made a lot of progress. We look forward to the meetings here

Steven Mnuchin, US Treasury Secretary

 ?? — AP ?? uS treasury Secretary Steven mnuchin speaks to the media upon his arrival at a hotel in beijing.
— AP uS treasury Secretary Steven mnuchin speaks to the media upon his arrival at a hotel in beijing.

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