Tai
will deliver remarks on her review of China trade policy at the
Center for Strategic Studies in Washington and participate in a
question-and-answer session, USTR said in a statement on
Thursday.
Since taking office in March, Tai has been conducting a
top-to-bottom review of Washington's China trade policy.
U.S. Joe Biden has kept in place tariffs on hundreds of billions
of dollars of Chinese imports imposed by former president Donald
Trump, but his administration has so far revealed little about
how it will address what it calls China's non-market trade and
subsidy practices.
Tai's remarks at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) on Monday will mark the
start of the final three months of the "Phase 1" U.S.-China
trade deal struck that Trump struck with Beijing at the start of
2019, easing a tariff war between the world's two largest
economies. It called for China to boost purchases of U.S. farm
and manufactured goods, energy and services by $200 billion over
the two years to the end of 2021 compared to 2017 levels.
Biden administration officials say China has not met its Phase 1
trade deal commitments and they intend to hold it to its
international trade commitments.
Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for
International Economics in Washington, estimates that China's
purchases of U.S. exports through August are running at about
62% of the Phase 1 targets, based on U.S. export data.
Tensions between the two economic powers has also grown as the
United States has restricted Chinese companies' access to U.S.
sensitive technologies.
Tai has said the United States faces "very large challenges" in
its trade relationship with China that require engagement across
the Biden administration. She has asked Congress for new trade
law tools to counteract massive Chinese state subsidies for
high-technology sectors.
The Biden administration has sought to rally U.S. allies to join
Washington in confronting what it says are abusive trade
policies by Beijing. U.S. and European Union officials met on
Wednesday in Pittsburgh to deepen transatlantic cooperation on
technology regulation, protecting sensitive technologies and
addressing challenges posed by "non-market economies" -- a
reference to China.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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