U.S.-China trade conflict could take years to resolve: Kudlow
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[September 07, 2019] By
David Lawder and Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - White House economic
adviser Larry Kudlow said on Friday the United States wants "near term"
results from U.S.-China trade talks in September and October but
cautioned that the trade conflict could take years to resolve.
Speaking to reporters outside the White House, Kudlow said that although
the United States and China have been negotiating on trade and
intellectual property issues for 18 months, that was a short period of
time in terms of what was at stake and negotiations could go on much
longer.
"A deal of this size and scope and central global importance, I don't
think 18 months is a very long time," Kudlow said.
"The stakes are so high, we have to get it right, and if that takes a
decade, so be it," Kudlow added, drawing parallels to U.S. Cold War
competition against the Soviet Union.
But in confirming talks between high-level U.S. and Chinese officials in
early October, Kudlow declined to predict outcomes or a specific
timeline for reaching any agreements.
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The plans for the first in-person U.S.-China trade meetings since late
July were set during a phone call on Thursday between Chinese Vice
Premier Liu He, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin. Trade deputies are due to meet in
mid-September.
BACK TO MAY
The 14-month U.S.-China trade war has escalated sharply since May, when
talks broke down after Beijing backtracked on earlier commitments to
make changes in law to improve intellectual property protections, curb
the forced transfer of U.S. technology to Chinese firms and improve U.S.
access to Chinese markets.
Since then, U.S. President Donald Trump has sharply increased existing
tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods and imposed or scheduled
new tariffs on virtually all remaining imports from China to increase
his negotiating leverage.
Kudlow told Bloomberg TV that he could not speculate on whether the
September or October talks could delay a planned tariff increase on Oct.
1 to 30% from 25% on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods.
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Director of the National Economic Council Larry Kudlow speaks to the
media at the White House in Washington, U.S., September 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
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"We would like to go back to where we were last May, but I don't know if that's
possible, and I don't want to predict any outcomes. This is a difficult matter,"
told reporters at the White House.
He also said that it was important that Chinese reforms be reflected in changes
to its laws and that any deal must have enforcement provisions to ensure that
China lives up to its commitments.
EVERYTHING ON TABLE
He said on Fox Business Network that the September and October talks would cover
all of the core issues in the dispute.
"Everything will be on the table. You can rest assured, for example, the
absolute key structural issues - the IP theft, the forced transfer of
technology, the cyber space, the clouds, financial services, all of that will be
on the table - agriculture purchases, industrial purchases, energy purchases,
getting tariff and non-tariff barriers down," Kudlow said.
While there were no precondition talks, Kudlow told Bloomberg TV that the Trump
administration wants "to see results in the near term."
"When we don't see results, we take additional actions," Kudlow said. "On the
other hand, if we do see results from these upcoming meetings, then progress
will be made."
Trump said on Twitter that China was hurting economically from the U.S. tariffs
but that the new round of talks were positive.
"'China is eating the Tariffs,'" Trump tweeted. "Billions pouring into USA.
Targeted Patriot Farmers getting massive Dollars from the incoming Tariffs! Good
Jobs Numbers, No Inflation(Fed). China having worst year in decades. Talks
happening, good for all!"
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton, Susan Heavey, Tim Ahmann and David Lawder;
Writing by David Lawder and Makini Brice; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Steve
Orlofsky and Cynthia Osterman)
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