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US business seeks action, not trade war

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Critics within US industry have accused China of unfair government subsidies to its companies, and of flooding the US market with cheap products from steel to solar panels.  


Michael Martina AND Diane Bartz


Although worried about the prospect of a trade war, American businesses operating in China nonetheless want President Donald Trump to wring some concessions on market access from China’s leader Xi Jingping when the two meet this week.


Trump warned in a tweet last week the meetings at his Mar-a-Lago resort on Thursday and Friday will be “very difficult” and “American companies must be prepared to look at other alternatives.”


Trump has said he wants US companies to stop investing in China and instead generate jobs at home.


He has also accused China of manipulating its currency to boost exports.


Critics within US industry have accused China of unfair government subsidies to its companies, and of flooding the US market with cheap products from steel to solar panels, while restricting foreign investment over vast swathes of the world’s second-biggest economy.


But they also worry Trump’s policies on China are not entirely clear, with his trade team still not in place, and may be subject to a ‘grand bargain’ involving other issues such as North Korea.


Trump is set to enter the meeting without several key advisers, including his pick for trade negotiator, Robert Lighthizer who has yet to be confirmed by Congress.


His nominee as ambassador to China, Iowa Governor Terry Branstad, has also yet to be confirmed, while several posts in the US State Department that formulate Asia policy remain unfilled.


“With this in mind, it is hard to imagine that there will be much in the way of concrete accomplishments at this summit, or even that there has been any significant interagency discussion on strategy leading up to it,” said Randal Phillips, Mintz Group’s Beijing-based managing partner for Asia and the former chief CIA representative in China.


Some of the largest US companies have contributed to the billions of dollars of foreign direct investment that have poured into China over the past two decades, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs.


They include tech companies like Apple, which makes much of its iPhone in China, automakers such as General Motors and Ford, heavy machinery firms like Caterpillar, retailers like Starbucks and makers of shaving foam and detergent, like Procter & Gamble.


US steel producers want Trump to press Xi on Chinese steel prices, according to a source who has been in


discussions with the administration in advance of the summit.


US automakers complain about a disparity in tariffs: The United


States has a 2.5 per cent tariff on auto imports, China’s is 25 per cent.


But the stakes are perhaps highest for American technology firms, who worry that China’s new cyber-security law, which takes effect in June, sets potentially discriminatory standards for multinationals.


The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF), a think-tank whose board includes representatives from Apple, IBM Google and other tech heavyweights, has urged the Trump administration to pressure China to “stop rigging markets”. It warned that possible retaliation from Beijing was not a reason for inaction.


Trump has staked out various positions on China as president in his tweets, phone calls and statements.


In a phone call with Xi after taking office, Trump gave ground on one of Beijing’s most sensitive issues — the status of Taiwan — after earlier suggesting he might not stick to Washington’s long-held “one China” policy.


Trump signed two executive orders on trade last Friday, one to improve import tariff collection and another to study the causes of the US trade deficit.


Trump said at the White House signing ceremony he and Xi were “going to get down to some serious business” and vowed that “the theft of American prosperity” by foreign countries would end.


Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang said last Friday the US-China trade imbalance was mostly the result of differences in the two countries’ economic structures and noted China had a trade deficit in services. — Reuters


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