Orlando Sentinel

Partial deal may pause US-China trade war

Trump says Sunday tariffs called off but ‘Phase 1’ details few

- By Paul Wiseman and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has dropped its plan to impose new tariffs on $160 billion of Chinese imports beginning Sunday under a modest interim deal that deescalate­s a 17-month trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

As part of the agreement announced Friday, the administra­tion is also reducing its existing import taxes on about $112 billion in Chinese goods from 15% to 7.5%.

In return, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer told reporters, China agreed to buy $32 billion in U.S. farm products over two years. Beijing has also committed to ending a long-standing practice of pressuring companies to hand over their technology as a condition of gaining access to the Chinese market.

Lighthizer said China had also agreed to lift nontariff barriers to the Chinese market for such products as beef, poultry, seafood, pet food and animal feed.

In all, the U.S. expects a $200 billion boost in exports over two years as a result of the deal.

“We expect the trade deficit to go down for sure,” Lighthizer said, adding that the deal will likely be signed the first week in January and take effect 30 days later.

Yet the administra­tion released no detailed paperwork on the agreement and said the text was still being translated between Chinese and English. In the past, the two sides had appeared to be close to firm agreements only to see negotiatio­ns fall apart.

The so-called Phase 1 agreement leaves some major issues unresolved, notably U.S. complaints that China unfairly subsidizes its own companies to give them an edge in world markets.

The deal does, however, at least temporaril­y defuse a conflict that has unnerved financial markets and hobbled global economic growth.

“This deal should go a long way in reversing the downward spiral in bilateral trade relations and increasing certainty for U.S. businesses,“said Wendy Cutler, a former U.S. trade negotiator who is now vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

But, Cutler cautioned, “it’s unclear on how far the Phase 1 agreement goes in addressing the key structural issues that brought the U.S. to the negotiatin­g table 17 months ago.”

President Donald Trump, who announced the agreement via Twitter, said that work on a follow-up Phase 2 agreement would begin immediatel­y.

That announceme­nt came minutes after the House Judiciary Committee approved impeachmen­t charges of abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress against Trump, leading the White House to argue that the president “never stops working and continues to make successful deals that benefit this country.”

Chinese officials said at a briefing in Beijing that if the administra­tion reduces its tariffs, China will lower its trade penalties on American goods and also scrap plans for new tariffs Sunday.

Friday’s announceme­nt was a long time coming. Trump had first announced a Phase 1 deal on Oct. 11, but negotiatio­ns on a final version continued for two months. Financial markets rallied in Asia on hopes for reduced trade tension. But stocks were down modestly in early trading on Wall Street.

The administra­tion alleges — and independen­t analysts generally agree — that China steals technology, forces foreign companies to hand over trade secrets, unfairly subsidizes its own firms and throws up bureaucrat­ic hurdles for foreign rivals.

Beijing rejects the accusation­s.

Since July 2018, the Trump administra­tion has imposed a series of trade sanctions on China, sometimes changing or delaying planned tariff rates.

Friday’s announceme­nt means that the U.S. will continue to impose 25% import taxes on $250 billion in Chinese goods and will halve the tariffs on an additional $112 billion to 7.5%. It will drop plans to target an additional $160 billion.

That step would have extended the tariffs to just about everything China sells the United States and would have hit consumer items such as toys and smartphone­s that have so far largely been spared.

Beijing has retaliated by taxing $120 billion in U.S. exports, including soybeans and other farm products that are vital to many of Trump’s supporters in rural America.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP ?? Shoppers walk past a store of US tech giant Apple in a retail district in Beijing on Friday.
NG HAN GUAN/AP Shoppers walk past a store of US tech giant Apple in a retail district in Beijing on Friday.

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