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US, China Sign Phase One Trade Deal, Calming Trade Tensions
2020-01-15 14:14:14   (Visits: 321 Times)
1?Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and U.S. President Donald Trump display the signed trade agreement between the United States and China in the East Room of the White House in Washington, on Jan. 15, 2020. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
2?Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and U.S. President Donald Trump sign a trade agreement between the United States and China in the East Room of the White House in Washington, on Jan. 15, 2020. (Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images)
US NEWS BY EMEL AkAn January 15, 2020 Updated: January 15, 2020
WASHINGTON—The United States and China signed a much anticipated “phase one” trade deal on Jan 15, making an important breakthrough in the nearly two-year-old trade war.President Donald Trump and China’s Vice Premier Liu He signed the accord at a White House ceremony.“Together we are righting the wrongs of the past and delivering a future of economic justice and security for American workers farmers and families,” Trump said. “This is a very important and remarkable occasion.”“Our negotiations were tough, honest, open, and respectful, leading us to this really incredible breakthrough,” Trump said. “Most people thought this thing will never happen. It should have happened 25 years ago, by the way.”
Vice President Mike Pence praised Trump’s leadership and the trade deal.“There’s an ancient Chinese proverb that says, men see only the present, but heaven sees the future,” Pence said. “So let today be the beginning of a brighter future, more prosperous to the American people, the Chinese people, and the world.”Trump offered rounds of praise to individual cabinet members and off iicials,involved in negotiating the treaty, and businessmen attending the ceremony at the White House, including executives of Mastercard, Honeywell, Boeing, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, AIG, J.P. Morgan Chase, and Ford.Trup also promised an end to punitive tariffs on China, after the completion of the phase 2 deal, negotiations on which he said would begin as phase one kicks in.
Toward the end of the remarks, Trump said: “Nobody’s ever seen anything like this. It is the biggest deal there is by anyone in the world, by far, and there is another big one next week [the USMCA come up for a vote in the Senate], but this is the biggest deal anybody’s ever seen. And we believe it to be a deal that’s unprecedented because China has 1.5 billion people, and ultimately in phase two, we’re going to be opening up China or the continent, so I hope you folks can handle it.”Liu He began his remarks by thanking the president of the United States, and then said he would like to read a letter from Chinese leader Xi Jinping.“Mr.President, as the U.S and China sign the deal, I asked Liu He to bring my warm regards,” the letter began.Xi reminded Trump of a Dec. 20 phone call in which he said the deal was good and hoped the two nations could now work on mutual respect. “I hope the U.S. can respect Chinese companies,” Xi wrote.Xi expressed hope for better U.S.-China relations and extended greetings for the Lunar New Year.Liu spoke optimistically about the significance of the deal.TheDeal,Beijing has committed to buy $200 billion worth of additional U.S. goods and services over the next two years,including $40-50 billion of agricultural goods each year.“The farmers are going to be so happy,” Trump said.The agreement promises an increased purchase of American manufactured goods, food, agricultural and seafood products, energy, and services.These purchases are expected to continue on the same trajectory for several years after 2021 and contribute to the rebalancing of the U.S.-China trade relations, according to a factsheet on the deal released by the administration.In return, Washington has agreed to modify its Section 301 tariff actions. It canceled a 15 percent levy on nearly $160 billion of Chinese goods scheduled for mid-December. It reduced tariffs to 7.5 percent from 15 percent on about $120 billion of Chinese imports.In addition, the 25 percent tariffs on nearly $250 billion of Chinese goods were kept in place, instead of increasing them to 30 percent, as was scheduled.Beijing also canceled imposing tariffs on U.S. goods that had been scheduled for Dec. 15 as retaliation.Trump earlier said that he would use the remaining U.S. tariffs as a bargaining chip for the second phase of the deal, negotiations for which are to start right away.The agreement also includes some commitments by China to protect intellectual property, stop forced technology transfers, and provide transparency on foreign exchange practices.China has also promised to open up its financial services markets to U.S. banks and credit companies.Uncertainty to PersistSen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), an outspoken critic of the Beijing regime, casts doubt on whether China can fulfill its pledges.“While it’s positive the United States is working towards a deal that would increase sales of U.S. agriculture products, Communist China never lives up to the bargain,” he told The Epoch Times in an email. “Communist China is stealing our technology and refuses to open their markets to foreign goods as required by their agreement to be part of the WTO, and needs to be held accountable.”Despite this partial agreement, the uncertainty is likely to persist in 2020 as U.S.-China bilateral relations go beyond trade.“This is also about human rights,” Scott said.The Florida Senator has been critical of Beijing for militarizing the South China Sea, breaking the Hong Kong agreement, and attacking religious freedom.Thorny Issues Remaining,The most important issues in U.S.-China relations are put off for a future negotiation. The phase one deal does not address China’s state subsidies, for example, one of the top concerns of the administration and the impetus for starting a trade war.Beijing has made no indication of how it would cut state subsidies and, politically, there seems to be no appetite to do that, according to experts. In the past decade, by funneling hundreds of billions of dollars in government subsidies China has managed to create its own national champions in key industries.In addition, China’s stance on intellectual property will continue to be a thorny issue, as Beijing wouldn’t make a significant concession to meet U.S. demands, experts say.China has passed legislation to improve market access and strengthen IP protection in recent years. However, skepticism remains over the enforcement of these rules.The phase one deal is “a small down payment on what needs to be done,” according to Peter Morici, an economist and business professor at the University of Maryland.
“As the agreement stands right now in terms of actual substantive changes in Chinese policy, there’s not a lot there,” he said.
“We have to see whether the Chinese will keep their word, whether they will indeed buy $200 billion more in U.S. products. If they do that, it might be easier to achieve a phase two deal because then liberalization in China might come easier.”
Morici, however, does not anticipate any progress on phase two talks until after the U.S. presidential election.“And if Trump is not reelected, this disagreement becomes very questionable,” he added.Currency ManipulationThe U.S. Treasury Department on Jan. 13 dropped its designation of China as a currency manipulator in its latest semi-annual currency report, reversing its August decision.
The United States accused China of resorting to currency manipulation to create an unfair competitive trade advantage. The Treasury’s designation in August was the first since 1994.
In the latest report, the Treasury stated China had made “enforceable commitments to refrain from competitive devaluation” and provided transparency on foreign exchange activities as part of the phase one trade deal.After depreciating as far as 7.18 per dollar in September, the Chinese renminbi appreciated and is currently trading at about 6.90 per dollar.Six Sectors to Benefit Most The trade deal is welcome news for U.S. farmers. China’s retaliatory tariffs affected a host of farm products, including soybeans, corn, wheat, cotton, rice, and sorghum, as well as livestock goods. Soybean has been among those hit hardest, as it accounted for nearly 10 percent of total U.S. exports to China before the trade war.In a research note, Cesar Rojas, an economist at Citigroup wrote that the United States might need to increase the output of six products to meet the terms of the deal. These products include soybeans, auto chassis, auto bodies, aircraft, liquid natural gas, and LED lamps.“Over the longer run, this is constructive for U.S. domestic investment and industrial production, but potentially costly in the short-run,” Rojas said. “This is because the U.S. has the greatest potential to immediately ship soybeans and grain to China, but not motor vehicles and aircraft.”
‘Trade war is not over yet’
The Chinese regime issued on Jan. 13 a cautionary note on a social media account affiliated with the state-run Economic Daily newspaper, saying the “trade war is not over yet.”
The regime called the signing of the phase one trade deal “just the first round of a game.”“We must bear in mind that the trade war is not over yet—the United States hasn’t revoked all its tariffs on China and China is still implementing its retaliatory measures. There are still many uncertainties down the road,” the note said.
The world’s two biggest economies have for months been embroiled in a tit-for-tat trade war. Trump launched a tariff campaign in 2018 as part of a strategy to end Beijing’s decades-long unfair trade practices.After joining the World Trade Organization, China has embarked on policies to support its key industries, including market barriers, state subsidies, currency manipulation, product dumping, forced technology transfers, and the theft of intellectual property and trade secrets.U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, one of the lead negotiators in talks with China warned earlier that it would still be wise to be skeptical of whether China would deliver on its promises. The United States won’t impose new tariffs as long as Beijing continues to act in good faith, he told reporters.
Follow Emel on Twitter: @mlakan

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