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						U.S., China report progress in Beijing trade talks
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		 [March 30, 2019]   
		By Michael Martina and Jeff Mason 
 BEIJING/PALM BEACH, Fla. (Reuters) - U.S. 
		President Donald Trump said on Friday that trade talks with China were 
		going very well, but cautioned that he would not accept anything less 
		than a "great deal" after top U.S. and Chinese trade officials wrapped 
		up two days of negotiations in Beijing.
 
 Both sides reported progress in the talks and China also approved 
		majority-owned brokerage joint ventures for U.S. bank JP Morgan Chase 
		and Japan's Nomura, a step toward meeting U.S. demands for more access 
		to China's financial services market.
 
 "The trade deal is going very well," Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago 
		resort in Florida.
 
 "It is a very comprehensive, very detailed enlisting of problems that 
		we've had with China over the years," Trump said of the talks. "And it's 
		going to have to be a great deal. If it's not a great deal, we can't do 
		it."
 
 In an earlier statement, the White House said the two sides "continued 
		to make progress during candid and constructive discussions on the 
		negotiations and important next steps," but did not elaborate on the 
		nature of the progress.
 
		
		 
		
 The talks are set to resume next week in Washington with a Chinese 
		delegation led by Vice Premier Liu He.
 
 U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and U.S. Trade Representative 
		Robert Lighthizer were in the Chinese capital for the first face-to-face 
		meetings between the two sides since Trump delayed a scheduled March 2 
		increase in tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods.
 
 China's state news agency Xinhua said the two sides discussed "relevant 
		agreement documents" and made new progress in their talks, but did not 
		elaborate in a brief report.
 
 U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley told Reuters in 
		Malvern, Iowa, that he has been told the Trump administration is 
		planning to complete a deal with China by the end of April.
 
 However, Trump administration officials, including White House economic 
		adviser Larry Kudlow, have said the negotiations are "not time 
		dependent" and could take weeks or even months to complete.
 
 "We’ve made great progress on intellectual property, on trade secrets, 
		on their government not forcing our business to give them our 
		technologies and on currency manipulation, among several other things," 
		Grassley said at a farm event.
 
 But the Iowa Republican, whose state has been hit hard by China's 
		retaliation against U.S. tariffs, added that without an effective 
		enforcement mechanism to hold China to its promises, "none of this other 
		stuff matters."
 
 Trump imposed tariffs on $250 billion of Chinese imports beginning last 
		July in a move to force China to change the way it does business with 
		the rest of the world and to pry open more of its economy to U.S. 
		companies.
 
 Though his blunt-force use of tariffs has angered many, Trump's push to 
		change what are widely viewed as China's market-distorting trade and 
		subsidy practices has drawn broad support.
 
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			China's Vice Premier Liu He shakes hands with U.S. Treasury 
			Secretary Steven Mnuchin as Yi Gang, governor of the People's Bank 
			of China (PBC) and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer stand 
			next to them as they pose for a group photo at Diaoyutai State 
			Guesthouse in Beijing, China March 29, 2019. Nicolas Asfouri/Pool 
			via REUTERS 
            
			 
Lobbyists, company executives and U.S. lawmakers from both parties have urged 
Trump not to settle simply for Beijing's offers to make big-ticket purchases 
from the United States to help reduce a record trade gap.
 LOST IN TRANSLATION?
 
 Going into the talks at the Diaoyutai State Guest House in Beijing, people 
familiar with the negotiations had said there were still significant differences 
on enforcement and the sequence of when and how U.S. tariffs on Chinese products 
would be lifted.
 
 Analysts had anticipated the scope of this round of talks to be quite narrow, 
but that both countries hoped to signal they were working hard toward a 
resolution.
 
 Reuters reported previously that the two sides were negotiating written pacts in 
six areas: forced technology transfer and cyber theft, intellectual property 
rights, services, currency, agriculture and non-tariff barriers to trade.
 
 One person with knowledge of the talks said "translation is definitely an 
issue," referring to discrepancies between the Chinese- and English-language 
versions.
 
 'THERE ARE GOING TO BE PROBLEMS'
 
 There remains scepticism that any deal can permanently resolve U.S.-China trade 
tensions.
 
 "Whatever implementation mechanism China agrees to, whether it is monthly or 
quarterly meetings or other check-ins, there are going to be problems," James 
Green, a senior adviser at McLarty Associates who until August was the top USTR 
official at the embassy in Beijing, told Reuters.
 
 Trump's demands include an end to Beijing practices that Washington says result 
in systematic theft of U.S. intellectual property and the forced transfer of 
American technology to Chinese companies.
 
 
 U.S. companies say they are often pressured into handing over technological 
know-how to Chinese joint venture partners, local officials or regulators as a 
condition for doing business in China.
 
 The U.S. government says technology is often subsequently transferred to, and 
used by, Chinese competitors.
 
 China says its laws enshrine no requirements on technology transfers that are a 
result of legitimate transactions.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Martina and Philip Wen in Beijing and Jeff Mason in Palm 
Beach, Florida; Additional reporting by Tim Ahmann, David Lawder in Washington 
and Tom Polansek in Malvern, Iowa; Writing by David Lawder, Ben Blanchard, and 
Tony Munroe; Editing by Clarence Fernandez, Dan Grebler and Bill Berkrot)
 
				 
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