China says it’s open to US trade talks offer but wants tariffs scrapped

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Beijing said Washington had “taken the initiative” in seeking negotiations.

Beijing’s Commerce Ministry on May 2 confirmed the US had reached out and that it was “currently evaluating” the offer.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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China on May 2 said it is evaluating a US offer of negotiations on tariffs but insisted Washington must be ready to scrap levies that have roiled global markets and supply chains before talks can begin.

Punishing US tariffs that have

reached 145 per cent on many Chinese products

came into force in April, while Beijing has responded with fresh 125 per cent duties on imports from the US.

High-end tech goods such as smartphones, semiconductors and computers have received a temporary reprieve from US tariffs.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that China has reached out for talks on the tariffs. On April 30, Mr Trump reiterated there was a “very good chance we’re going to make a deal”.

Beijing’s Commerce Ministry on May 2 said that it was the US that had reached out, and it was “currently evaluating” the offer.

But it said any talks would first require concessions from the US side.

“If the US wants to talk, it should show its sincerity to do so, be prepared to correct its wrong practices and cancel unilateral tariffs,” the ministry said.

“In any possible dialogue or talks, if the US side does not correct its wrong unilateral tariff measures, it just means the US side is completely insincere and will further damage the mutual trust between the two sides,” it added.

“Saying one thing and doing another, or even attempting coercion and blackmail under the guise of talks, will not work.”

Professor Wu Xinbo, director of the Centre for American Studies at Shanghai’s Fudan University, said that Beijing would likely play hardball.

He told AFP: “Of course, the US hopes to start negotiations as soon as possible, but our attitude is: ‘You must first take some action to show sincerity’.”

Once the US revokes tariffs on China, “we can discuss our legitimate concerns”, such as Washington’s worries about unbalanced bilateral trade and Beijing’s gripes over US efforts to “suppress” its technological development, he said.

Dozens of countries face a 90-day deadline expiring in July to strike an agreement with Washington and avoid higher, country-specific rates.

Beijing had vowed to fight a trade war to the bitter end if needed, with a video posted on social media this week by its Foreign Ministry vowing to “never kneel down!”

The Commerce Ministry, on May 2, said: “China’s position has always been perfectly consistent.

“If it’s fight, we will fight to the end; if it’s talk, the door is wide open. The tariff war and trade war were unilaterally initiated by the US side.”

China has acknowledged that global economic vicissitudes have strained its economy, long dependent on exports, with officials admitting that foreign-facing firms are facing difficulties.

Data this week showed factory activity shrank in April, with Beijing blaming a “sharp shift” in the global economy.

On April 30, data showed the US economy unexpectedly contracted in the first three months of the year, as Mr Trump’s tariff plans triggered an import surge.

NUS associate professor of political science Chong Ja Ian said it remained unclear whether any progress can be made, despite the mounting economic need for both sides to make a deal.

“Neither side wishes to look weak,” he said.

Analyst Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management said Beijing’s May 2 comments represented the “first olive branch” in the gruelling trade war.

“On paper, both capitals are waving detente flags,” he wrote in a note. “But dig a layer deeper, and the path is still littered with landmines,” he added.

“China’s pledge to fight ‘to the end’ wasn’t retired – just shoved behind softer sound bites – and the ‘cancel duties first’ stick remains a non-starter for the White House.” AFP

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