President Donald Trump in a torrent of tweets dampened already low expectations for revived trade discussions with China that began in Shanghai on Tuesday. The White House had pushed to revive the talks, stalled since May.
Trump’s China trade tweets dampen already low expectations for deal
“My team is negotiating with them now, but they always change the deal in the end to their benefit,” Mr. Trump said of China in one of his tweets on the topic Tuesday morning. Mr. Trump also suggested that China may be waiting until after the 2020 election to sign a trade deal, adding “if & when I win, the deal that they get will be much tougher than what we are negotiating now…or no deal at all.” Mr. Trump later said China is “praying” for him to lose the election.
China may be thinking, “What’s the point?””An alternative explanation for China failing to agree to a deal with Trump is based on his own actions. China asks itself, What’s the point?,” Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for International Economics said in a tweet following Mr. Trump’s postings. Any agreement now is likely to be a “short-term fix,” he predicted.Bown pointed to Trump’s now withdrawn threat to slap tariffs on Mexican imports over a non-trade related matter — immigration — as one reason for Chinese negotiators to be wary. China, trade agreement, trade, United States, Donald Trump, negotiation
The White House in May suspended its latest threat to slap tariffs on about $300 billion of imported Chinese goods that aren’t already subject to the duties. U.S. businesses and ultimately consumers pay for tariffs, not the exporting countries like China.Mr. Trump’s threats aren’t working, Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Global Times, a state-sponsored news organization in China, suggested in a tweet on Tuesday. “Whenever it’s time to negotiate, the U.S. side comes up with the trick of piling pressure. Really not a good habit. Americans need to change their negotiating style, show more sincerity, not just wield [a] stick,” he wrote.Expectations already low”In general there’s not high expectations for these talks in Shanghai,” David Dollar of the Brookings Institution said at an event in Washington, D.C., on Monday. Dollar said he was “hopeful” for a “mini-deal” that includes China resume some agricultural purchases from the U.S. it has stopped or shifted elsewhere after an earlier round of tariffs imposed by Mr. Trump.