• World Economy

    China Says Big Differences Remain After US Trade Talks

    Crucial talks aimed at heading off a trade war between China and the US have ended with key differences over tariffs and trade imbalances remaining unresolved. Both sides agreed, however, to keep on talking.

    China’s official Xinhua news agency reported Friday that crucial trade talks between China and the United States had ended with a consensus on some issues but major disagreements on some others. The two sides had agreed to continue communicating to work toward making more progress, DW reported.

    The high-powered two-day negotiations included US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and trade representative Robert Lighthizer on the US side, as well as President Xi Jinping’s top economic adviser Liu He at the head of the Chinese delegation.

    Coming after weeks of heightened commercial tensions between the world’s two largest economies, the officials discussed foreign investment, protection of intellectual property rights and tariffs among other issues.

    Several international media outlets reported Friday that Washington had urged China to cut its trade surplus with the US immediately and to stop subsidizing advanced technology. According to a document presented to the Chinese delegation ahead of the two-day trade talks which began on Thursday, the US delegation is seeking a deficit reduction by $200 billion by 2020 from a trade gap totaling $375 billion currently. It is unclear whether or not the US has made progress on the issue as both sides didn’t brief the public on the results.

    Ahead of the meeting, US President Donald Trump said in a message on Twitter that he expected Beijing to provide a “level playing field” for the United States in bilateral trade.

    Originally, the Trump administration was seeking to cut the American trade deficit with China by $100 billion and gain concessions over policies that force foreign companies to share technology with Chinese partners.

    The US president sparked a series of tit-for-tat exchanges by threatening to impose tariffs worth $150 billion on Chinese goods, prompting China to announce its own tariffs in retaliation.

    Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for China’s Foreign Ministry, told a regular news briefing that it was “not realistic” to expect all issues to be resolved in only one round of negotiations. “Discussions and negotiations should be based on the basis of equality and mutual respect, and the outcome mutually beneficial and win-win,” she said Thursday.

    Chinese diplomats meeting their US counterparts in recent weeks have indicated that Beijing was willing to help reduce America’s huge trade deficit and open up its markets to more services and companies from abroad.

    However, they dismissed Trump’s demand for a huge deficit reduction as both arbitrary and nonsensical. They said the deficit was a result of structural problems such as America’s poor infrastructure, US tax policies and consumers’ low savings rates that made it harder for the country to compete globally.

    For some Chinese officials, Trump’s demands are also an indication of US unease about China’s rise as an economic and military power, which has grown amid Beijing’s recently announced strategy to overtake western industry leaders in advanced technologies.