The Independent

US ramps up trade tensions ahead of crucial summit

- CAITLIN MORRISON ACTING BUSINESS EDITOR

The Trump administra­tion has escalated trade tensions with China once again, accusing it of intellectu­al property theft ahead of a critical meeting between the US president and Xi Jinping at the G20 summit later this month.

The US trade representa­tive’s office released a 53-page report in which it accused China of conducting a global espionage campaign to collect sensitive commercial informatio­n, and said the country operated an unfair technology transfer regime which requires US companies to hand over tech and intellectu­al

property to Chinese competitor­s.

“We completed this update as part of this administra­tion’s strengthen­ed monitoring and enforcemen­t effort,” trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said. “This update shows that China has not fundamenta­lly altered its unfair, unreasonab­le, and market-distorting practices.”

In response to the report, a spokesman for China’s foreign ministry said US officials should read a white paper published by the Chinese government in September that claims China “firmly protects” intellectu­al property rights. Meanwhile, one of Donald Trump’s top economic advisers has suggested that the case could be made for evicting China from the World Trade Organisati­on. Kevin Hassett, chair of the president’s council of economic advisers, said that China had “misbehaved” and the US had been failed by the WTO.

The latest increase in tensions between Washington and Beijing comes weeks after Mr Trump and Mr Xi agreed to “strengthen economic exchanges”. The two economies have been locked in a battle over trade for months now, which has seen the US impose tariffs on $250bn (£195bn) worth of Chinese goods, and the Asian power retaliatin­g with $110bn of duties on US goods. The WTO has previously warned that the US-China trade war poses a grave threat to the global economy, putting millions of jobs at risk.

Last month the organisati­on’s director-general, Roberto Azevedo, said: “Without action to ease tensions and recommit to cooperatio­n in trade, we could see serious harm done to the multilater­al trading system. The long-term economic consequenc­es of this could be severe.

“These effects would cause significan­t disruption­s for workers, firms and communitie­s as they adjust to this new reality. Potentiall­y millions of workers would need to find new jobs; firms would be looking for new products and markets; and communitie­s for new sources of growth.”

 ??  ?? Kevin Hassett suggests China should be evicted from the WTO (Getty)
Kevin Hassett suggests China should be evicted from the WTO (Getty)

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