US-China trade negotiators in ‘constructive’ phone call
- Sides discuss ‘core issues’ for phase one trade agreement, Xinhua says
- Officials also commit to keeping communication channels open, but no other details of talks are revealed
A high-level phone call between Chinese and US trade negotiators on Saturday was “constructive”, according to China’s state news agency Xinhua.
The announcement stopped short of using phrases like “substantial progress” or “reaching consensus” as it had in previous statements about such calls.
US-China trade deal hamstrung by fundamental differences: experts
While China was unlikely to make any further offers in the deal, it was still up to US President Donald Trump to agree to the terms, said Lu Xiang, a specialist on US affairs at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
“I think the substantial part of the negotiations was done earlier this month,” he said. “China is not likely to make new offers, and the ones that were made are not unconditional and are dependent on a decision by the US.”
Speaking at an event in New York on Tuesday, Trump again raised a possible escalation of the trade war.
“If we don’t make a deal, we will substantially raise those tariffs,” he said. But he added that “a significant phase one trade deal could happen soon” and that Beijing was “dying to make a deal”.
The US has imposed a 25 per cent tariff on US$250 billion worth of Chinese imports and a 15 per cent duty on a further US$112 billion. A new 15 per cent tariff on US$156 billion worth of Chinese products is set to take effect on December 15.
Lu said he believed the details of the agreement had been largely determined by the two sides already, through working-level negotiations.
“I believe, at minister level, the two sides have reached an agreement and it’s up to the presidents to make a final decision,” he said.
Additional reporting by Reuters
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