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						U.S., China agree to 
						first trade steps under 100-day plan 
						
		 
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		 [May 13, 2017] 
		By Ayesha Rascoe and Michael Martina 
		 
		WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) - The United 
		States and China have agreed to take action by mid-July to increase 
		access for U.S. financial firms and expand trade in beef and chicken 
		among other steps as part of Washington's drive to cut its trade deficit 
		with Beijing. 
		 
		The deals are the first results of 100 days of trade talks that began 
		last month, when a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and 
		Chinese President Xi Jinping proved far more friendly than had been 
		expected after last year's U.S. presidential campaign, but the immediate 
		impact was unclear. 
		 
		"This will help us to bring down the deficit for sure," U.S. Commerce 
		Secretary Wilbur Ross said at media briefing in Washington. "You watch 
		and you'll see." 
		 
		The United States ran a trade deficit of $347 billion with China last 
		year, U.S. Treasury figures show. 
		 
		By July 16, the 100th day after the leaders' meeting, China agreed to 
		issue guidelines that would allow U.S.-owned card payment services "to 
		begin the licensing process" in a sector where China's UnionPay system 
		has had a near monopoly. 
		 
		China will also allow U.S. imports of beef no later than July 16, and 
		the United States will issue a proposed rule to allow Chinese cooked 
		poultry to enter U.S. markets. 
						
		
		  
						
		Foreign-owned firms will also be able to provide credit rating services 
		in China. 
		 
		"We believe that Sino-U.S. economic cooperation is the trend of the 
		times... We will continue to move forward," Chinese Vice Finance 
		Minister Zhu Guangyao told a Beijing media briefing. 
		 
		Trump had pledged during his presidential campaign that he would stop 
		trade practices by China and other countries that he deemed unfair to 
		the United States. His tough talk toward Beijing had fueled early fears 
		of a trade war. 
		 
		But Trump's rhetoric toward China has softened in the past month, 
		expressing admiration for Xi and saying he wanted Beijing to help deal 
		with the North Korean nuclear threat. 
		 
		Shortly after their meeting, Trump said he had told Xi that China would 
		get a better trade deal if it worked to rein in North Korea. China is 
		neighboring North Korea's lone major ally. 
		 
		On Friday, when asked whether the trade talks with the United States 
		were related to North Korea, Zhu said economic issues should not be 
		politicized. 
		 
		UNCERTAIN BENEFITS 
		 
		But while the world's two biggest economies agreed to take a number of 
		steps by July 16, it was not clear how much these new deals would 
		increase trade in the near term. 
		 
		Ker Gibbs, the chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, 
		said the measures were a good beginning but not a breakthrough. 
						
		
		  
						
		"Past foot-dragging means we won't celebrate until these promises are 
		executed," Gibbs said, calling the opening in the electronic payments 
		market "mainly symbolic". 
		 
		
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			U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross sits for an interview in his 
			office in Washington, U.S. May 9, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			  
"This should have been done years ago when it would have made a difference. At 
this point, the domestic players are well entrenched so foreign companies will 
have a hard time entering the China market." 
China is the top export market for U.S. agriculture products, with the total 
value of exports rising by more than 1,100 percent since 2000 to $21.412 billion 
in 2016, so beef sales are potentially lucrative for U.S. exporters. 
 
China had conditionally lifted its longstanding import ban on American beef last 
year, but few purchases have been made. The ban was imposed in 2003 due to a 
case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, in 
Washington state. 
 
And U.S. credit card operators Visa Inc <V.N> and MasterCard Inc <MA.N> have yet 
to be independently licensed to clear transactions in China, despite a 2012 WTO 
ruling mandating that Beijing open the sector and rules issued by the central 
bank to let foreign firms enter the market. 
 
Visa said in an emailed statement it looked forward to submitting an application 
for a bank-card clearing institution license, which, "once granted", would allow 
it to support economic development in China. 
 
MasterCard welcomed the announcement, saying it looked forward "to having full 
and prompt market access in China". 
 
The United States also signaled that it was eager to export more liquefied 
natural gas, saying China could negotiate any type of contract, including 
long-term contracts, with U.S. suppliers. 
  
For U.S. gas drillers, China provides a potential customer base beyond countries 
such as Japan and South Korea, where the long-term demand outlook is bleak due 
to mature economies, rising energy efficiency and falling populations. 
 
Potential cooperation between the United States and China on LNG would not have 
any immediate impact on supplies, as China currently does not need new gas 
supplies and the United States is not yet able to deliver more. 
 
Randal Phillips, Mintz Group's Beijing-based managing partner for Asia, said 
that Washington was too focused on selling more to China and should instead seek 
to address structural imbalances created by Chinese industrial policies and 
barriers to investment. 
 
"That's going to be the challenge, and hopefully the Trump administration 
doesn't start declaring victory," he said. 
 
(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe in Washington; Michael Martina, Kevin Yao and 
Matthew Miller in Beijing; and John Ruwitch in Shanghai; Editing by Simon 
Cameron-Moore and Nick Macfie) 
				 
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