The Guardian (USA)

Australia welcomes US-China trade deal, despite possible costs

- Ben Doherty

China’s commitment to buy $200bn of US goods over two years could come at the expense of Australian farmers and energy providers, but the “truce” in the countries’ trade war will be a confidence boost for global markets, trade minister Simon Birmingham has said.

“This is welcome news. Australia has long called for a reduction, a cessation of the trade war between the United States and China – it was hurting global economic growth, and so we welcome the fact that this agreement has been signed,” he told radio station 2GB.

But he warned that the inking of the “phase one” agreement would not eliminate trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

“I think this is a truce rather than a complete eliminatio­n of trade tensions between the US and China,” Birmingham said.

Under the phase one deal, Beijing has agreed to buy $US50bn in agricultur­al products, $US50bn in energy supplies and $US75bn in manufactur­ing products. If this commitment is honoured, it is likely to see China buying less from other trading partners, such as Australia.

Asked whether farmers would not be impacted by the new deal, Birmingham said “we can’t say ‘won’t be’ completely, but certainly ... this is a deal where … we see more upside than downside because of the confidence that it provides”.

“The bulk of those purchases [committed to by China to come from US sources] we would expect to happen as part of China’s growth, rather than substituti­ng existing purposes. We’d expect them to be in areas that Australia is not particular­ly exposed to.”

Birmingham said Australian LNG supplies to China were secure, with long-term contracts already locked in.

As Chinese and US relations have foundered over trade over the past two years, Australia has been one of the major beneficiar­ies.

The share of Australia’s agricultur­e exports going to China rose to nearly 30% last financial year, a level of concentrat­ion to a single market not seen since the 1950s.

China is the leading export market for a broad variety of Australian food

and agricultur­al products, from wool, cotton, barley and beef, to wine, table grapes and rock lobsters.

More broadly, the US and China’s focus on their bilateral trade comes at the expense of a commitment to the global trading framework.

The rules of the beleaguere­d World Trade Organisati­on – whose appeals court has been crippled by the US blocking appointmen­ts to it – benefit smaller and mid-sized economies such as Australia. Australian trade policy has been to bind the world’s most powerful economies more tightly to global trading rules, creating a more level playing field for smaller nations.

The Minerals Council of Australia acting chief, Gavin Lind, said increased global confidence following the USChina deal should lead to greater demand for Australian products, especially from growing Asian economies that rely on Australian minerals for infrastruc­ture, energy, transport and communicat­ions.

But he said there was concern that the deal would “undermine the principles of free trade and multilater­alism” that have underpinne­d Australia’s approach to trade policy for many decades.

Beyond the Chinese commitment­s, the 86-page document outlining phase one of the trade deal also makes commitment­s around intellectu­al property, technology transfer and financial services. Under the agreement the US has agreed to halve the tariff rate it imposes on $120bn worth of Chinese goods to 7.5%. But some high tariffs remain, including 25% sanctions on about $250bn worth of imports, including components that US factories use to assemble finished manufactur­ed products.

There is no timeline for negotiatio­ns on “phase two”.

CommSec chief economist Craig James said much would depend on what can be agreed for phase two, as well as the adherence to the commitment­s in phase one.

“China says that the extra purchases of US goods won’t be at the expense of other countries. We’ll have to wait and see,” he said.

“But overall, today’s agreement is a positive first step for the US, China and the world more broadly.”

 ?? Photograph: Alex Wroblewski/POOL/EPA ?? Donald Trump and Chinese vice premier Liu He at the signing of the phase one trade deal between the US and China.
Photograph: Alex Wroblewski/POOL/EPA Donald Trump and Chinese vice premier Liu He at the signing of the phase one trade deal between the US and China.

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