Trump predicts trade concessions by
China, despite rising tensions
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[April 09, 2018]
By Michelle Price and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump predicted on Sunday that China would take down its trade
barriers, expressing optimism despite escalating trade tensions between
the world's two largest economies that have roiled global markets in the
past week.
The two countries have threatened each other with tens of billions of
dollars' worth of tariffs in recent days and Chinese officials have said
this is not the time for negotiations.
But Trump administration officials have stressed that the tariffs are
not yet in place and the dispute could be resolved through talks.
In a Twitter post on Sunday, Trump echoed this, saying "China will take
down its trade barriers because it is the right thing to do. Taxes will
become reciprocal and a deal will be made on intellectual property."
He referred to his personal relationship with Chinese President Xi
Jinping and said the two men would always be friends, adding, "Great
future for both countries!"
There has been no indication that Trump and Xi have had any
conversations since the trade conflict erupted last week and no formal
trade talks between the United States and China have been scheduled yet.
On Tuesday, Washington unveiled some $50 billion worth of proposed
tariffs on Chinese imports and on Thursday Trump upped the ante,
directing U.S. trade officials to identify tariffs on another $100
billion of Chinese imports. He said this was “in light of China’s unfair
retaliation” against the earlier U.S. trade action.
China responded by saying it was fully prepared to respond with a
"fierce counter strike" if the United States followed through on the new
threat.
China's Commerce Ministry spokesman, Gao Feng, said on Friday that
Trump's threat of another package of tariffs was "extremely mistaken"
and unjustified, adding no negotiations were likely in the current
circumstances.
Crude oil and global equity markets tumbled on Friday on investor
worries about the impact a tariff war could have on the world economy.
'FIRMLY ATTACKED'
China's state media has sharply criticized the United States, saying its
trade protectionism actions will end in defeat. "If the U.S. says that
it will pay any price, it must be firmly attacked," China's official
Xinhua news agency said on Saturday.
On Sunday, the state People's Daily newspaper sought to tap into concern
among some U.S. business leaders over the impact of Washington's planned
tariffs.
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President Donald Trump speaks about tax reform during a visit to
White Sulphur Springs, in West Virginia, U.S., April 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
"We call on the international business community including the
United States industrial and commercial circles to take prompt and
effective measures and urge the U.S. government to correct its
errors," it said.
Trump's chief economic adviser, National Economic Council Director
Larry Kudlow, has repeatedly sought in recent days to soothe
concerns about a trade war, stressing that no tariffs have yet been
implemented.
He reiterated that in an interview on CNN's State of the Union show
on Sunday, saying, "This process might turn out to be very benign
... Maybe China will want to come round and talk in earnest - so far
it hasn't, I hope it does."
The United States, charging China with unfair trade practices and
theft of intellectual property, proposed some $50 billion in tariffs
on Tuesday - 25 percent tariffs on more than 1,300 Chinese
industrial and other products from flat-panel televisions to
electronic components.
China shot back within hours with its own list of proposed duties on
$50 billion of American imports, including soybeans, aircraft, cars,
beef and chemicals.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on the CBS program Face
The Nation there was a risk of a trade war between the United States
and China but that he did not expect one.
He added that Trump and Xi have a "very close relationship" and that
the United States and China would continue to discuss trade issues.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Michelle Price in Washington;
Additional reporting by Caren Bohan in Washington and Cate Cadell in
Beijing; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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