U.S., China set 'phases' in trade progress

Tariff rise halted; no deal inked yet

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin meet Friday at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative in Washington. More photos are available at arkansasonline.com/1012china/
Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin meet Friday at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative in Washington. More photos are available at arkansasonline.com/1012china/

WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump's administration is suspending a tariff increase on $250 billion in Chinese imports that was set to take effect Tuesday, and China agreed to buy $40 billion to $50 billion in U.S. farm products as the world's two biggest economies reached a truce Friday in their 15-month trade war.

The White House said the two sides made some progress on the thornier issues, including China's lax protection of foreign intellectual property. But more work will have to be done on key differences in later negotiations, including U.S. allegations that China forces foreign countries to divulge trade secrets in return for access to the Chinese market.

The U.S. and Chinese negotiators have so far reached their tentative agreement only in principle. No documents have been signed.

Trump announced the trade truce in a White House meeting with the top Chinese negotiator, Vice Premier Liu He. The news followed two days of talks in Washington.

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"You're very tough negotiators," Trump said to the Chinese delegation.

Trump, who just weeks ago said he was looking for a "complete" China deal, said that the two sides will break the agreement into phases.

"It's such a big deal that doing it in sections, in phases, is really better," Trump said during a meeting with Liu. "So you'll either have two phases or three phases."

The first phase could be signed when Trump appears alongside his Chinese counterpart at a meeting of global leaders in Santiago, Chile, in November. The next phase would begin soon after, Trump said.

Trump has yet to drop plans to impose tariffs Dec. 15 on an additional $160 billion in Chinese products, a move that would extend the sanctions to just about everything China ships to the United States. The December tariffs would cover a wide range of consumer goods, including clothes, toys and smartphones and would likely be felt by American shoppers.

While providing scant details of just what was agreed to Friday, the White House said China has pledged to be more transparent about how it sets the value of its currency, the yuan. The Trump administration has accused China of manipulating the yuan lower to give its exporters a price advantage in foreign markets.

China has agreed to open its markets to U.S. banks and other financial services providers, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said.

Earlier Friday, China announced a timetable for carrying out a promise to allow full foreign ownership of some finance businesses, starting with futures traders on Jan. 1, as China tries to make its slowing economy more competitive and efficient.

Ownership limits will be ended for mutual-fund companies on April 1 and for securities firms on Dec. 1, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said. Until now, foreign investors have been limited to owning 51% of such businesses.

For now, the two sides have come to "almost a complete agreement" on both financial services and currency issues, Mnuchin said.

The trade war has inflicted an economic toll on both countries. U.S. manufacturers have been hurt by rising costs from the tariffs and by uncertainty over when and how the trade hostilities may end.

"They're trying to de-escalate," said Timothy Keeler, a former chief of staff at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representatives. "I think it serves both sides' interests because both sides were feeling pain."

Some China hawks were unimpressed by the agreement.

"It's basically some purchases and a bunch of fluff because no one in the administration really wants to go through with the tariffs anyway," said Derek Scissors, a China expert at the American Enterprise Institute.

Stock prices had been up substantially all day, mainly in anticipation of a significant trade agreement. But once the White House announced the contours of the tentative accord, the market shed some of its gains. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had risen more than 500 points at its high point Friday, ended the day up 319.92 points, or 1.21%, to close at 26,816.59.

The U.S. and Chinese negotiators did not deal this week with a dispute over the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei. The U.S. has imposed sanctions on Huawei, saying it poses a threat to U.S. national security because its equipment can be used for espionage. Trump has said he was willing to use Huawei as a bargaining chip in the trade talks.

The United States still has in place tariffs on more than $360 billion worth of Chinese imports and is set to hit an additional $160 billion in December. What changed Friday was that Trump suspended plans to raise the existing tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese products from 25% to 30% next week.

"This is an encouraging first phase," said Craig Allen, president of the U.S.-China Business Council. "We await word on how implementation will be measured and in what time frame, as well as details on scheduling subsequent phases."

Scissors suggested that the deal amounted to merely a temporary pause in the conflict.

"The president is acting as if a lot of Chinese concessions have been nailed down, and they just haven't," Scissors said.

The two countries were close to a more comprehensive deal in early May. But talks stalled after the U.S. accused China of reneging on earlier commitments. Trump acknowledged that Friday's deal has yet to be put down on paper but said that wouldn't be a problem.

"China wants it badly, and we want it also," Trump said. "We should be able to get that done over the next four weeks."

Earlier Friday, Trump indicated in a Twitter post that if the countries did reach a trade agreement, he would be able to sign it quickly.

Sen. Ronald Wyden, the ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee that has jurisdiction over trade policy, pushed back on Trump's tweet in a statement Friday to Bloomberg News: "Donald Trump should know that any meaningful trade deal is only legitimate because of the authority granted to him by Congress, and that authority can be taken away," he said.

Under the U.S. Constitution, Congress holds power over international trade. For decades, it has legally delegated trade-negotiating authority to the executive branch. Lawmakers in recent months have grown increasingly wary of what they see as Trump's abuse of that authority and discussed ways to claw it back, citing the president's many unilateral tariff measures and a lack of transparency in negotiations.

Gregory Daco, an economist at Oxford Economics, said the partial nature of the deal announced Friday won't relieve much of the uncertainty surrounding trade policy that has discouraged many American companies from investing in new equipment and expanding.

"For businesses this will mean less damage, not greater certainty," Daco said in a research note.

Daco has estimated that the trade fight will cut U.S. growth by about 0.6 percentage point in 2020. Friday's pact might reduce that slightly to 0.5 percentage point, he said. "While the market reacted positively to the news, we caution that beyond the promises and niceties, the deal doesn't address key underlying issues," Daco wrote.

The two countries are deadlocked primarily over the Trump administration's assertions that China deploys predatory tactics -- including outright theft -- in a sharp-elbowed drive to become the global leader in robotics, self-driving cars and other advanced technology.

China has been reluctant to make the kind of substantive policy changes that would satisfy the administration. Doing so likely would require scaling back China's aspirations for technological supremacy, which it sees as crucial to its prosperity.

Information for this article was contributed by Paul Wiseman, Kevin Freking, Christopher Rugaber and Bani Sapra of The Associated Press; by Ana Swanson of The New York Times; by David J. Lynch and Rachel Siegel of The Washington Post; and by Isis Almeida and Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg News.

A Section on 10/12/2019

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