Kudlow said negotiators for the world's two largest economies
were in close touch via telephone but he gave no further details
on the timing of a possible deal.
"We're getting close," he told an event at the Council on
Foreign Relations in Washington. "The mood music is pretty good,
and that has not always been so in these things."
The United States and China have been locked in successive waves
of tit-for-tat tariffs that have roiled financial markets and
threaten to drag growth in the global economy to its lowest rate
since the 2007-2008 financial crisis.
Markets are anxiously awaiting an agreement to end uncertainty
that has slowed business investment around the globe. An
agreement had appeared likely in May, but those prospects were
dashed after U.S. negotiators said China backed away from the
text of a draft agreement.
Kudlow's comments could ease market concerns that flared again
this week amid reports that the trade talks had hit a snag over
how and when to reduce tariffs, and what level of agricultural
purchases could be expected from China.
Markets also soured after U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday
said he could impose substantial new tariffs on China if no deal
was reached.
Kudlow told the audience he had just come from a meeting of the
top Trump administration trade officials and was more
optimistic.
"It's not done yet, but there has been very good progress and
the talks have been very constructive," he told the event.
He also opened the door to the possibility that Trump and
Chinese President Xi Jinping would not need to meet in person to
clinch a deal.
Trump had hoped to sign the "phase one" agreement with China on
the sidelines of the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit
in Chile this month, but that possibility disappeared after
Chile withdrew from hosting the event.
Kudlow said the White House had hoped to stick to that general
timetable. He joked that his preference was for the deal to be
signed in his office on the second floor of the White House.
"I don't like to travel," he quipped.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Sandra Maler and Grant
McCool)
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