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China Reiterates Demand That U.S. Must Lift All Tariffs

Published 07/04/2019, 10:15 PM
Updated 07/04/2019, 10:40 PM
© Bloomberg. A worker walks past shipping containers sitting stacked at the Yangshan Deepwater Port, operated by Shanghai International Port Group Co. (SIPG), in Shanghai, China, on Friday, May 10, 2019. The U.S. hiked tariffs on more than $200 billion in goods from China on Friday in the most dramatic step yet of President Donald Trump's push to extract trade concessions, deepening a conflict that has roiled financial markets and cast a shadow over the global economy.

(Bloomberg) -- China continues to stress that the U.S. must remove all the tariffs placed on Chinese goods as a condition for reaching a trade deal.

On Friday, an influential blog connected to state media said the talks will “go backward again” without that step, echoing the line from Ministry of Commerce’s weekly briefing on Thursday.

While President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping agreed last month to re-start talks and the U.S. suspended the application of fresh tariffs, no plan for face-to-face negotiations has yet been announced.

“If the two sides are to reach a deal, all imposed tariffs must be removed,” Ministry of Commerce Spokesman Gao Feng said on Thursday. “China’s attitude on that is clear and consistent.”

Scrapping all the punitive tariffs the U.S. imposed is the “most important” request and that won’t change during the trade talks, according to a commentary by Taoran Notes, a blog run by the Economic Daily under a pseudonym on the WeChat platform.

Some U.S. officials have insisted that some tariffs will stay even after a deal, as a means to enforce it.

China laid out three red lines for a trade deal when the talks collapsed in May. As well as the removal of all the tariffs, any purchases must be in line with the country’s real demand and the deal must be based on equality and mutual respect.

Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural products is the country’s “special chip” in the negotiation, and any imports will depend on whether the talks will be equal and mutually respectful, according to the Taoran Notes commentary.

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China is apparently considering buying some agricultural goods from the U.S. as a gesture of goodwill, but so far, there has been no sign of the “tremendous” purchases that President Donald Trump said China had promised to make.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Yinan Zhao in Beijing at yzhao300@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeffrey Black at jblack25@bloomberg.net, James Mayger

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

Latest comments

I read several editorials on china daily that the tarriffs hurt US consumers more than china companies. It’s in Chinas strategic interest to keep them intact as part of a new trade deal
It safe to say china has the upper hand here, some might call it a trap or what not, but the US economy has been very dependent of chines services in goods through out the years, the sleeping giant wont be pressured, even the fed reserve is on alert just incase trump messes things up.
have u been to the 3rd and 4th liners cities in china? do u know how many factories are there ? pls dont utter rubbish without getting your facts.
I told you guys ... if Trump wants a deal, then te tariffs need to be lifted. If he doesn't then China cannot make a deal, that means Trump cannot win reelection because economy will crash. If he still olay tough and want $300B more, China is ready for the Long March, that means the US economy will have to have a big U turn and head into a deep recession. The only way for Trump is to make a fare deal with respect, and lift all tarriffs, then everything will be good.
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