Crucial trade negotiations with China will
continue on Friday, the White House said late Thursday night, about 90
minutes before steep new tariffs were set to hit Chinese goods.
President Donald Trump met with the US Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin following the first day
of talks with the Chinese delegation and the sides "agreed to continue
discussions tomorrow morning at USTR," the White House said in a
statement.
However, the announcement did not affect US plans to more than double
the tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports to 25 percent --
dashing hopes that Trump might decide to hold off at the last minute as
the negotiations continued.
Since last year, the two sides have exchanged tariffs on more than $360
billion in two-way trade, gutting US agricultural exports to China and
weighing on both countries' manufacturing sectors.
Lighthizer and Mnuchin met with the Chinese delegation for about 90
minutes Thursday evening. The White House statement said they also "had a
working dinner with Vice Premier Liu He" who is leading the Chinese
delegation.
Despite optimism from officials in recent weeks that the talks were
moving towards a deal, tensions reignited this week after Trump angrily
accused China of trying to backpedal on issues already agreed to in the
negotiations.
"They took many, many parts of that deal and they renegotiated. You can't do that," Trump said Thursday.
But he held out hopes of salvaging a trade deal, even with the sudden flare-up in hostilities.
"It's possible to do it," Trump said of the trade deal Thursday. "I did
get last night a very beautiful letter from President Xi."
However, he also said he would be equally satisfied to simply keep
tariffs in place. And he has renewed his threat to extend the tough
tariffs to all products the US imports from China.
The International Monetary Fund has repeatedly warned that the trade
battle between the world's top economies was a "threat" to global
growth, and called for a rapid resolution.
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