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TRADE WARS
Trump to greet China's trade negotiator as deadline presses
By Douglas Gillison
Washington (AFP) Feb 22, 2019

US-China extend trade talks as deadline looms
Washington (AFP) Feb 22, 2019 - US President Donald Trump on Friday said a trade summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping was likely to occur next month, and hail two days of "very good talks" by negotiators.

The talks were extended through Sunday as officials race to reach a deal ahead of a deadline next week when US duty rates are due to rise sharply -- although Trump again said he was considering extending the deadline.

"I think there is a very, very good chance that a deal can be made," Trump told reporters at the White House on a second day of trade negotiations with Chinese officials.

"If we are doing well, I could see extending that" deadline for the end of the three month tariff truce.

Trump said he expected the meeting with Xi to be held in March at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, which is where the leaders can strike the ultimate bargain.

An agreement on currency manipulation will be included in the trade pact, he said.

"We expect to have a meeting sometime in a not too distant future," he said. "Probably fairly soon in the month of March."

Officials from Beijing also expressed optimism about a positive outcome.

"From China, it is very likely that it will happen," Chinese trade envoy Liu He said, speaking through an interpreter.

Analysts say the two sides are likely to trumpet mutual agreements to resolve the easier parts of the trade dispute -- increasing purchases of American exports, more open investment in China and tougher protections for intellectual property and proprietary technology.

The harder parts covering issues like scaling back China's ambitious industrial strategy for global preeminence, are another question.

China is reportedly proposing to increase its imports of US energy and agricultural exports significantly.

Wall Street, which had been up for most of the day on optimism about the trade talks, reacted coolly to the news, paring some of the day's gains, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up nearly 0.5 percent shortly around 2030 GMT.

President Donald Trump is due to meet with China's top trade negotiator Friday afternoon, as talks continue to try to defuse the tariff war between the world's economic superpowers.

Just a week remains to avoid a sharp increase in US duty rates on more than $200 billion in Chinese exports -- though Trump has suggested he could extend the March 1 deadline.

Global stock markets were higher with Trump's personal involvement seen as a sign of the White House's confidence in a successful outcome.

The fourth round of talks have been underway all week, with senior officials meeting as of Thursday. The White House said Trump would meet with China's Vice Premier Liu He, who is leading the delegation from Beijing, early Friday afternoon.

China's President Xi Jinping also met with US negotiators last week in Beijing, a sign the two leaders are taking a keen interest in the high-stakes talks, as the conflict weighs on the global economy.

Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund, called the US-China trade tensions a "major risk" to world economic growth.

Since July, the countries have hit out with tariffs on more than $360 billion in two-way trade.

While the tariffs alone are having "minimal" effect on global trade, they are damaging business confidence and weighing on stock markets, she said.

"I cross my fingers every morning and my toes every evening because I hope that it is going to end up with a way to fix the system, not break it," Lagarde told the US radio program Marketplace.

The IMF has cut its forecast for global growth this year due to the combined impact of the trade war.

But a clear-cut solution could be difficult given the US demands for far-reaching structural changes.

Analysts say the two sides are likely to trumpet mutual agreements to resolve the easier parts of the trade dispute -- increasing purchases of American exports, more open investment in China and tougher protections for intellectual property and companies' proprietary technology.

The harder parts covering issues like avoiding currency devaluation, and scaling back China's ambitious industrial strategy for global preeminence, are another question.

- Trump-Xi summit -

Analysts say the two sides are likely to trumpet mutual agreements to resolve the easier parts of the trade dispute -- increasing purchases of American exports, more open investment in China and tougher protections for intellectual property and proprietary technology.

The harder parts covering issues like avoiding currency devaluation, and scaling back China's ambitious industrial strategy for global preeminence, are another question.

US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer is leading the US negotiating team, which also includes Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

The two sides are working towards formalizing commitments in various ahead of a possible meeting between Trump and Xi. CNBC cited sources Friday saying the meeting could take place in late March at Trump's Mar-a-Lago golf resort.

Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said China may have to remove its tariffs in order to increase purchases of US goods, but Trump may feel no pressure to roll back the duties he imposed last year.

"The big surprise would be a complete removal of tariffs by Trump but I'm expecting an asymmetrical removal of tariffs by China in order to get to some of these numbers," he said.

China's retaliation have hit US farm exports hard. The US Agriculture Department estimated this month that US soy exports would not turn to their pre-trade war levels for another six years.

According to Bloomberg, China is preparing an offer to buy an additional $30 billion a year of US agricultural goods, including soybeans, corn and wheat.

Global stock markets have been battered amid the trade tensions, but word of progress had Wall Street in a cheerful mood, with the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average up 0.6 percent shortly before 1800 GMT.

William Reinsch, a former senior Treasury official for trade in the administration of President Bill Clinton, told AFP a risk for Trump is whether any agreement holds and the Chinese honor their commitments.

"If it unravels and we have a string of unmet commitments and then US retaliation right before the election, we're kind of right back where we started," he said.


Related Links
Global Trade News


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TRADE WARS
Crunch time as high-level US-China trade talks resume
Washington (AFP) Feb 21, 2019
With only eight days left in their trade truce, top US and Chinese officials on Thursday returned to the daunting task of bridging a chasm between the world's two largest economies. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed the talks with Beijing are going "very well," but concrete signs of progress have not been apparent in the three months since the two sides agreed to pause their trade war in December. China's Commerce Ministry said Thursday the two sides would "go a step further in de ... read more

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