Not 'sitting on its hands,' U.S. to up pressure on China, trade czar Tai
says
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[March 26, 2022] By
Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is done "sitting on its
hands" and will more actively pressure China, the world's second largest
economy, to change trade practices that Washington believes distort the
market, top U.S. trade negotiator Katherine Tai said.
Tai, a trade lawyer and former congressional staffer appointed by
President Joe Biden, inherited difficult talks with Beijing over a
"Phase 1" trade deal negotiated by former President Donald Trump.
In an interview with Reuters this week, Tai said the United States was
preparing a new approach to China trade policy.
Without offering specifics, she said Washington needed new, more
effective tools to defend its economic interests and better compete with
China. New U.S. trade investigations, which could result in tariffs or
even embargoes against China, may be next, sources familiar with the
matter said.
"We're not going to stop pushing China and challenging China to reform
and change. But we can't afford to keep sitting on our hands and waiting
for China to make its decision," said Tai, the first Asian American in
the job and a fluent Mandarin speaker.
"We are going to need to turn the page on the playbook," Tai said.
A March report from her office said China had "doubled down on its
harmful trade and economic abuses." Beijing has failed to buy a promised
$200 billion in additional U.S. goods and services agreed in the deal.
China now faces warnings from the United States, the world's largest
economy, not to aid Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
In the year since Tai became trade czar, some U.S. business executives
say they have been frustrated by the slow progress in punishing China.
Meanwhile, the U.S. goods trade deficit with China hit $355.3 billion in
2021, the largest recorded since 2018.
Tai acknowledged frustrations, but pointed to longstanding disputes that
Washington has resolved with other countries in the past year,
precisely, she said, to focus on the bigger threats China poses.
Washington settled a 17-year dispute over aircraft subsidies with the EU
and Britain, and a four-year battle over U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs
with the EU, Britain and Japan, she said.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Katherine Tai speaks to members
of the media following a tour of a silicon wafer plant being
expanded by South Korean semiconductor manufacturer SK Siltron CSS,
in Bay City, Michigan, U.S., March 16, 2022. REUTERS/Rebecca
Cook/File Photo
ALLIES, TARIFFS, CONGRESS
Tai in November revived a trilateral dialogue with the EU and Japan begun by the
Trump administration, seeking a joint approach to China's industrial subsidies
and other "non-market policies and practices," aimed at getting World Trade
Organization support, a U.S. official said.
Washington is considering a new Section 301 investigation into Chinese
industrial subsidies that could lead to a fresh round of tariffs or embargos,
officials say.
The Biden administration may also target China's violations of intellectual
property protections under Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, said William
Reinsch at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
The U.S. Congress is also considering bipartisan legislation that would bolster
protections against trade secret violations and expedite investigatory and
exclusionary processes.
Tai, citing concerns about China's use of forced labor in its Xinjiang region,
is also developing a first-ever USTR trade strategy on the topic.
Jamieson Greer, a partner with King & Spalding and former senior U.S. trade
official, said Beijing's response to the war in Ukraine had heightened Europe's
growing unease with China, adding Western sanctions against Russia may provide a
playbook for future actions against China.
Tai said a "one size fits all" approach would not work.
"These are two different countries, two different economies, two different
situations. And we really conflate them at our peril," she said.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; additional reporting by David Lawder; Editing by
Heather Timmons and Howard Goller)
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