Much detail, little progress in U.S.-China talks,
sources say
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[August 25, 2018]
By Michael Martina and David Lawder
BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S-China
trade talks this week were heavy on details but short on progress as
U.S. negotiators outlined cases of American firms harmed by Chinese
practices and China argued it was meeting its WTO obligations, people
familiar with contents of the discussions said.
The two days of talks in Washington led by mid-level officials did
little to resolve a worsening trade spat between the world's two biggest
economies and ended on Thursday without a joint statement.
Washington separately held hearings during the week on another round of
proposed tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports that appear
increasingly likely to take effect in late September or early October.
And while factions on the U.S. side have given conflicting signals on
how hard to press Beijing during the trade dispute, officials from the
Treasury Department, which led the talks, and the U.S. Trade
Representative, which has taken a harder line, were aligned in their
messaging, the people said.
The talks took place as the two sides followed through on threatened
tit-for-tat tariffs on $16 billion worth of the other's goods. Beijing
has filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization about the U.S.
duties.
During the talks, Chinese negotiators repeatedly invoked what they said
was Beijing's compliance with WTO rules, an argument that did not
impress the U.S. side.
One of the sources described the U.S. response as: "We're not going to
care about the WTO as you fuel overcapacity, wreck industries and steal
IP (intellectual property). We're not going to sit on our hands."
All of the sources declined to be identified given the sensitivity of
the matter.
Washington is demanding Beijing improve market access and intellectual
property protections for U.S. companies, cut industrial subsidies and
slash a $375 billion trade gap.
In a brief statement on Friday, China's commerce ministry said both
sides had a "constructive" and "candid" exchange over trade issues, and
will stay in touch on the next steps.
U.S. officials, including President Donald Trump, had downplayed
expectations for the talks.
No further talks have been announced.
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Containers are seen at the Yangshan Deep Water Port in Shanghai,
China April 24, 2018. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
Chinese negotiators brought up the lack of U.S. market access for items
including Chinese cooked chicken, one of the exports that was agreed last year
as part of a 100-day plan, demonstrating Beijing is still seeking some U.S.
concessions in the talks.
"The Chinese are stuck in the mindset that they want something in return. That's
not going to fly in Washington anymore," another source briefed on the talks
said.
U.S. negotiators brought up the case of Micron Technology <MU.O>, which was
temporarily barred by a Chinese court in July from selling its main
semiconductor products in China, citing violation of patents held by Taiwan's
United Microelectronics Corp (UMC) <2303.TW>.
In December, Micron had filed a civil lawsuit in California accusing UMC and its
state-backed Chinese partner of stealing technology.
One of the people said the talks focused on systemic issues related to
Washington's "Section 301" probe into China's intellectual property and
technology transfer practices.
There was little, if any, focus on more purchases by China of U.S. commodities.
During the previous round of talks, in June in Beijing, U.S. Commerce Secretary
Wilbur Ross unsuccessfully sought to secure major Chinese purchases of U.S.
soybeans and liquefied natural gas.
In an editorial late on Friday, the Global Times, a nationalist Chinese tabloid
run by the ruling Communist Party's People's Daily, said it was clear that the
two days of talks did not yield significant progress.
"An escalation in the US-China trade war is becoming obvious," it said, citing
U.S. congressional elections in November as a key reason for the tough U.S.
stance.
"So far, neither side shows signs of extending the trade war to other areas. We
hope that both sides can stick to the 'rule' and keep the trade issue within
limits," it said.
(Reporting by Michael Martina in BEIJING and David Lawder in WASHINGTON; Writing
by Tony Munroe; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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