Beijing says claims of ongoing US-China trade talks ‘groundless’
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President Donald Trump told reporters on April 23 that the US would have a “fair deal with China”.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
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BEIJING – China said on April 24 any claims of ongoing trade talks with the United States were “groundless” after US President Donald Trump played up the prospects of a deal to lower hefty tariffs he imposed on China.
The world’s two leading economies are locked in an escalating tit-for-tat trade battle triggered by Mr Trump’s new levies on Chinese goods, which have reached 145 per cent on many products.
Beijing has responded with new 125 per cent duties on imports from the US.
The tariff blitz
Beijing denied Mr Trump’s claim that negotiations were being conducted daily.
“As the competent department for foreign economic and trade relations, I would like to emphasise that there are currently no economic and trade negotiations between China and the United States,” Chinese Commerce Ministry spokesman He Yadong told reporters.
“Any claims about the progress of China-US economic and trade negotiations are groundless and have no factual basis,” Mr He said.
“China urges the United States to correct its wrong practices, show the sincerity needed for talks (and) return to the correct track of equal dialogue and consultation,” he said.
Not true
Mr Trump told reporters on April 23 that the US would have a “fair deal with China”
Asked if there is direct US contact with China on trade, Mr Trump said: “Every day.”
China’s Foreign Ministry also responded to the claims on April 24, calling reports of ongoing negotiations “false”.
“As far as I know, China and the United States have not conducted any consultations or negotiations on the issue of tariffs, let alone reached any agreement,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said during a news conference.
China’s denial of ongoing negotiations coincides with comments made on April 23 by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who told reporters that the two countries were “not yet” talking
“I think both sides are waiting to speak to the other,” he said at an event on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank’s spring meetings in Washington.
The IMF has revised down
It also significantly lowered its forecast for China’s economic expansion in 2025 to 4 per cent, well below Beijing’s official target of around 5 per cent.
Chinese exports in 2024 reached record highs, but experts say that strong turbulence to global trade brought about by US tariffs may force Beijing to depend on other sources of activity to meet its goals. AFP

