Trump says China talks coming, Beijing calls for trade war resolution
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[August 26, 2019]
By Jeff Mason and Yawen Chen
BIARRITZ, France/BEIJING (Reuters) - The
United States and China sought to ease trade war tensions on Monday,
with Beijing calling for calm and U.S. President Donald Trump predicting
a deal after markets fell in response to new tariffs from both
countries.
Trump, speaking on the sidelines of the G7 summit of world leaders in
France, said Chinese officials had contacted U.S. trade counterparts
overnight and offered to return to the negotiating table.
Vice Premier Liu He, who has been leading the talks with Washington,
said on Monday China was willing to resolve the trade dispute through
"calm" negotiations and resolutely opposed the escalation of the
conflict.
Trump welcomed that language and, days after referring to President Xi
Jinping as an enemy, heaped praise on his Chinese counterpart.
"They want calm, and that's a great thing, frankly. And one of the
reasons that he's a great leader, President Xi, and one of the reasons
that China's a great country is they understand how life works," Trump
said.
"China called last night our top trade people and said 'Let’s get back
to the table', so we’ll be getting back to the table, and I think they
want to do something," he said.
In Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he had not heard
that a phone call between the two sides had taken place. However,
China's Commerce Ministry typically releases statements on trade calls.
It did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The increasingly bitter trade war between the world's two largest
economies escalated on Friday, with both sides leveling more tariffs on
each other's exports.
Trump announced an additional duty on some $550 billion of targeted
Chinese goods, hours after China unveiled retaliatory tariffs on $75
billion worth of U.S. goods.
On Sunday, the White House said Trump regretted not raising the tariffs
even more. But the president also appeared to back off of his threat to
order U.S. companies out of China.
Liu, speaking at a tech conference in southwest China's Chongqing, said
nobody benefited from a trade war.
"We are willing to resolve the issue through consultations and
cooperation in a calm attitude and resolutely oppose the escalation of
the trade war," Liu, who is Xi's top economic adviser, said, according
to a government transcript.
"We believe that the escalation of the trade war is not beneficial for
China, the United States, nor to the interests of the people of the
world," he said.
The trade war has damaged global growth and raised market fears that the
world economy will tip into recession.
Geng, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, said China would retaliate
if Trump enforced the latest U.S. tariffs.
Asked if he would abandon the tariffs, Trump said: "Anything is
possible. I can say we are having very meaningful talks, much more
meaningful I would say than any time frankly."
MARKETS REEL
Before Trump spoke on Monday, global stock markets reeled, while China's
yuan currency fell to an 11-year low. Investors streamed into the safe
harbors of sovereign bonds and gold.
The U.S. president, who at times predicts a deal will happen and at
other times says he is happy with the tariff situation, said talks would
start again soon and a deal would come.
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President Donald Trump speaks as he meets Egypt's President
Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi (not pictured) for bilateral talks during the
G7 summit in Biarritz, France, August 26, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria
"I think we are going to have a deal," he said.
The two sides had been slated to meet in September in Washington,
but it was unclear last week whether the new tariff tit-for-tat
would alter those plans.
The United States accuses China of multiple economic sins, including
intellectual property theft, currency manipulation, and forced
technology transfer by U.S. companies to their Chinese partners as a
requirement for doing business in China. China denies the U.S.
allegations.
Beijing and Washington were close to a deal last spring but U.S.
officials said China backed away from an agreed text over a
reluctance to change laws to address U.S. complaints.
The trade war has affected businesses all over the world and
disrupted supply chains. Trump recently urged U.S. companies to move
their operations out of China, but it was not clear how or whether
his efforts to order such a move would work.
Liu said on Monday: "We welcome enterprises from all over the world,
including the United States, to invest and operate in China.
"We will continue to create a good investment environment, protect
intellectual property rights, promote the development of smart
intelligent industries with our market open, resolutely oppose
technological blockades and protectionism, and strive to protect the
completeness of the supply chain."
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Trump could order
companies out of China under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act if he declared a national emergency.
Chinese state media on Monday hit out at the United States.
The official China Daily said Washington would "never be allowed to
control China's fate".
"It has become unquestionably clear that his administration's tariff
war against China is politically motivated. What Washington wants
from its largest trade partner is for it to be content to play
second fiddle and meekly do as it demands," the English-language
paper wrote in an editorial.
The Global Times, a widely-read tabloid published by the ruling
Communist Party's official People's Daily, said: "U.S. companies are
welcome to invest and operate in the Chinese market, but if some
U.S. companies want to obey Trump's order and join Washington's
trade war, the result is bleak. A decision to give up the Chinese
market is just suicide."
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez and Janet Lawrence)
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