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China wants more talks before signing that trade deal Trump promoted

Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin walks over to talk with reporters about trade negotiations with China at the White House in December.
(Evan Vucci / Associated Press)
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China wants to hold more talks this month to hammer out the details of the “Phase One” trade deal touted by President Trump before Xi Jinping agrees to sign it, according to people familiar with the matter.

Beijing may send a delegation led by Vice Premier Liu He, China’s top negotiator, to finalize a written deal that could be signed by the presidents at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit next month in Chile, one of the people said. Another person said China also wants Trump to scrap a planned tariff hike in December in addition to the hike scheduled for this week, something the administration hasn’t yet endorsed. The people asked not to be named discussing the private negotiations.

The U.S. and China have emerged from last week’s talks with different takes on what’s in the accord and how close they are to signing a document. Trump said, “We’ve come to a deal, pretty much, subject to getting it written” and indicated it might take several more weeks of negotiation. China’s Ministry of Commerce merely said that “the two sides have made substantial progress” and “agreed to work together in the direction of a final agreement.” The state-run Xinhua news agency didn’t mention a deal either.

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After Trump’s vow to boost industry and two years of gains, manufacturing is in recession, threatening the livelihoods of many of his supporters.

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Hu Xijin, the editor in chief of the Global Times, said in a tweet that “China-U.S. trade talks made breakthrough last week and the two sides have the strong will to reach a final deal.” The Chinese tabloid is run by the People’s Daily, which is the flagship newspaper of the Communist Party.

Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, speaking in an interview Monday on CNBC, said he expects officials to work in coming weeks to get the first stage ready for both sides to sign. If that doesn’t happen, the new U.S. import taxes on Chinese products will be imposed starting Dec. 15, he said.

Taoran Notes, a state-affiliated blog that focuses on the trade talks, said that the difference in tone struck by Chinese media was because of “cultural and language” differences and both sides are in consensus over the deal.

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China’s Ministry of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment on further talks. Geng Shuang, a foreign ministry spokesman, reiterated Monday that both sides had made progress and said he hoped “the U.S. will work with China and meet each other halfway.”

Investors have struggled to determine whether the U.S. and China reached a breakthrough in an 18-month trade war. Worse-than-expected September trade figures in China underscored the growing pressure on Trump and Xi to reach a deal to avert a wider slowdown in the global economy.

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China has become increasingly wary of any statements from Trump. Trust between the two sides suffered a big blow in May 2018, when Trump put a stop to a deal for China to buy more energy and agricultural goods to narrow the trade deficit. The U.S. president further sowed distrust in August when he claimed that Chinese officials had called and requested to restart trade talks.

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For Xi, it’s seen as politically unfeasible to accept a final deal that doesn’t remove the punitive tariffs altogether. Nationalists in the Communist Party have pressured him to avoid signing an “unequal treaty” reminiscent of those China signed with colonial powers.

“The U.S. must concede on its December tariff threat if they want to sign a deal during APEC summit, otherwise it would be a humiliating treaty for China,” said Huo Jianguo, a former Chinese Commerce Ministry official who is now vice chairman of the China Society for World Trade Organization Studies. “The U.S. has definitely shown some good gestures but we shouldn’t exclude the possibility of another flip-flop.”

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