As trade talks reach endgame, U.S.-China
ties could hinge on enforcement
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[April 29, 2019]
By Michael Martina
BEIJING (Reuters) - U.S. negotiators head
to China on Tuesday to try to hammer out details to end the two
countries' trade war, including the shape of an enforcement mechanism,
the success or failure of which could set the trajectory of ties for
years to come.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin will travel to Beijing for talks beginning on April 30,
followed by a visit by Chinese Vice Premier Liu He to Washington for
more discussions starting on May 8.
Both sides have cited progress on issues including intellectual property
and forced technology transfer to help end a conflict marked by
tit-for-tat tariffs that have cost the world's two largest economies
billions of dollars, disrupted supply chains and rattled financial
markets.
Those issues are still on the table, according to the White House, but
U.S. officials say privately that an enforcement mechanism for a deal
and timelines for lifting tariffs are sticking points.
Agreeing to a way to enforce a deal is one thing. Ensuring it holds up
under ties strained by growing mistrust and geopolitical tensions will
be another, say watchers of the relationship.
"An effective enforcement mechanism will define the deal," Tim
Stratford, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham),
told Reuters.
"The deal doesn't need to revamp China's economy. But it does need to
provide a new methodology for dealing with our differences," said
Stratford, a lawyer and former assistant U.S. Trade Representative who
has worked in China for more than three decades.
"This is incredibly high stakes. We have a particular window of
opportunity, and a lot in the future of U.S.-China relations rests on
this," he said.
Earlier this month, Mnuchin said the two sides had agreed on
establishing new "enforcement offices" to police an agreement, although
he did not give specifics. On Sunday, he told the New York Times talks
are entering a critical point: "We're getting into the final laps."
AT A CROSSROADS
U.S. President Donald Trump said on April 4 that the two sides could
have a deal worked out in about four weeks. On Thursday, he said he
would soon host Chinese President Xi Jinping at the White House - a
meeting seen as needed to cement an agreement.
Though a final date for a deal - if there is one - remains unclear,
talks have brought China and the United States to a crossroads in their
fraught relationship.
China has long defined commerce as the ballast in the relationship.
Now, some warn that the two are teetering toward a new type of "Cold
War", as Beijing asserts its growing military strength in Asia and
Washington ramps up scrutiny of Chinese tech companies and cracks down
on Chinese espionage and influence campaigns at U.S. institutions and
universities.
Beijing sees U.S. actions as efforts to contain its development.
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China's Vice Premier Liu He (C) pose for a photo with U.S. Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin (R) and U.S. Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer (L) at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on March 29,
2019. Nicolas Asfouri/Pool via REUTERS
But years of only piecemeal economic reforms in China and continued
industrial policies that U.S. companies complain have eroded their
competitive edge have weakened key U.S. business sector support for
China. AmCham said this month that U.S. businesses could no longer
be counted on as a "positive anchor" in bilateral relations.
And U.S. officials, chagrined by what they say have been years of
Chinese stalling tactics in annual economic dialogues, have been
adamant that a trade deal must have teeth.
Lighthizer has suggested that some form of the tariffs Trump imposed
last year on Chinese goods as leverage in the dispute should hang
over a deal to ensure compliance.
Any such a mechanism would be fragile, trade experts said.
For one, it would mean continued uncertainty for already trade
war-weary businesses and markets.
They also say China's record of exploiting loopholes at the World
Trade Organization suggests it will look aggressively for new areas
where it can say the United States isn't living up to its pledges.
If Washington re-establishes tariffs weeks or months down the road,
it could lead to retaliation and the collapse of the deal.
In such a case, the two sides would find themselves back at square
one, this time without negotiations as a viable way to deescalate
disputes.
Because of this, one American trade consultant said: "It takes great
imagination and optimism to think we can come up with an effective
enforcement mechanism beyond the short term."
A DURABLE DEAL?
Another source with knowledge of the trade talks argued that if the
United States triggered the mechanism, Beijing would be unlikely to
"come back to the table with this president", referring to Trump.
"As long as there is a mechanism of tariffs hanging over the deal,
it won't be durable," the source said.
Trade advisers in China appear more confident that an agreement
would not fall apart quickly because both sides need it politically,
particularly Trump, who is seen in China as eager for a détente as
the 2020 U.S. presidential election approaches.
Wang Dong, an expert on China-U.S. relations at Peking University,
said it would be politically difficult for both sides to return to
talks in the wake of a collapsed deal.
"I'm not saying China will end altogether future talks with the
Trump administration. But it would take time to build momentum
again, to say the least," Wang said.
(Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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