China’s tough stance leaves trade talks with US in limbo

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China struck a more aggressive tone in its trade war with the United States yesterday, suggesting a resumption of talks between the world’s two largest economies would be meaningless unless Washington changed course. The tough talk capped a week that saw Beijing unveil fresh retaliatory tariffs, US officials accuse China of backtracking on promises made during months of talks and the Trump administration level a potentially crippling blow against one of China’s biggest and most successful companies. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang, asked about state media reports suggesting there would be no more trade negotiations, said China always encouraged resolving disputes with the United States through dialogue and consultations. “But because of certain things the US side has done during the previous China-US trade consultations, we believe if there is meaning for these talks, there must be a show of sincerity,” he told a daily news briefing. The United States raised Beijing’s ire this week when it announced it was putting Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, the world’s biggest telecoms equipment maker, on a blacklist that could make it extremely hard to do business with US companies. China has yet to say whether or how it will retaliate, although its state media is sounding an increasingly strident note. The ruling Communist Party’s People’s Daily published yesterday a front-page commentary that evoked the patriotic spirit of the country’s past wars. “The trade war can’t bring China down. It will only harden us to grow stronger,” it said. Global stocks, which rebounded this week on the prospect of another round of US-China talks, suffered a fresh bout and China’s yuan slid to its weakest level against the US dollar in almost five months. Prices of US government debt were trading higher. The increasingly acrimonious trade dispute has rattled investors who fear that the countries are careening dangerously down a track that will badly damage global supply lines and put the brakes on an already slowing world economy. The South China Morning Post, citing an unidentified source, reported that a senior member of China’s Communist Party said the trade war could reduce China’s 2019 economic growth by 1 percentage point in the worst-case scenario. US President Donald Trump, who has embraced protectionism as part of an “America First” agenda aimed at rebalancing global trade, has accused China of backing out of a deal earlier this month that would have ended the 10-month dispute. Earlier this month, Reuters reported China had backtracked on commitments to change its laws to resolve core US complaints about theft of intellectual property and trade secrets, forced technology transfers and other practices. Trump punctuated two days of talks in Washington last week with a decision to raise tariffs on $200bn in Chinese imports to 25% from 10%. The negotiations ended in a stalemate. On Monday, Beijing said it would raise its tariffs on a revised list of $60bn in US goods effective June 1. Trump, in turn, said he is considering slapping tariffs on the remaining $300bn in Chinese imports to the United States.

GulfofTimes

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