Trade war: US, China discuss details of Xi-Trump summit

Bloomberg Updated - December 06, 2021 at 06:25 PM.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump (file photo)

The US and China are discussing arrangements for the meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit, a senior Chinese trade official said, as Beijing warned about consequences of American trade measures.

Also read:China broke the deal, says Trump

The trade teams were working to implement the decision by the top leaders, Vice Commerce Minster Wang Shouwen told a news briefing on Monday in Beijing. Wang provided no specifics on what communications have occurred. “Compromise will be on both sides. It will be a two-way street,” he said, adding that any talks must be based on mutual respect, meaning respect for each others sovereignty.

Agenda setting meet

The face-to-face meeting between the leaders of the world’s two largest economies will be closely watched, as markets anticipate an effort to cool mounting trade and security disputes. Talks broke down last month after Trump accused China of reneging on its commitments, increased tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese imports and threatened to target the remaining $300 billion with duties of as much as 25 per cent.

Although the US has taken steps to ease tensions in recent days, postponing a planned speech by Vice President Mike Pence on Chinese human rights, mounting strategic disputes have tempered expectations for a trade break through. The China Daily , a state-run English-language newspaper, said in an editorial on Sunday that for such a meeting at such a point, course-setting is probably more important than any specifics.

Also read:Trade war will worsen before it gets better, economists say

Trump and Xi planned to discuss a range of shared issues in Japan, Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Zhang Jun told the briefing on Xi’s G-20 plans. Chinese officials also called on the US on Monday to roll back restrictions on Huawei Technologies Co and other technology firms and refrain from weighing in on the recent unrest in Hong Kong.

Wang, the Commerce Ministry official, argued that blocking Chinese companies including Huawei from buying US software and components also harms the interests of American firms and restricting exports does not help to balance trade. China hoped the US would remove its companies from the entities list, Wang said.

Meanwhile, China’s Foreign Ministry said at a separate briefing that the Memphis, Tennessee-based FedEx Corp needed to better explain its errors with packages related to Huawei. In the latest case, the shipping company has said it made a mistake last week by rejecting a shipment sending one of the Chinese company’s phones to the US from the UK.

National security guise

“The US government has been trumping up charges to abuse national security and employing state power to clamp down on a Chinese company,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said in response to a question on the incident at a regular news briefing on Monday in Beijing. “That is the root cause of the problem. US bullying has hurt Chinese companies and US companies. It affects normal operations of businesses and disrupts normal cooperation.”

Another sticking point could be Hong Kong, where historic protests against a Beijing-backed extradition bill have prompted US legislation to revisit the former British colony’s special trading status. Activists have announced a G-20 Free Hong Kong rally on Wednesday in an attempt to put the issue on the summits agenda.

Also read:China says it ‘won’t allow’ G20 discussion on Hong Kong

“Hong Kong affairs are purely the internal affairs of China,” said Zhang, the foreign ministry official. “We do not allow any country or any individual to interfere in Chinas internal affairs in any way.”

Published on June 24, 2019 12:51