US President Donald Trump said that positive progress has been made towards a trade deal with China amid media reports that US negotiators are insisting Beijing agrees to regular check-ups on its reforms and shorter timelines for rectifying the trade imbalance.
Following vice-ministerial level talks in Beijing earlier this month, Trump said on Saturday that a deal “could very well happen” after a “very extraordinary number of meetings”, though he denied reports that US tariffs on Chinese products might soon be lifted.
“If we make a deal, certainly we would not have sanctions and if we don’t make a deal, we will,” he said. “It’s going well. I would say about as well as it could possibly go.”
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SubscribeThe two countries are more than halfway through a 90-day tariff truce – brokered by Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the start of December – but tariffs remain in place on billions of dollars worth of goods on both sides. And the US has said it will go ahead with raising duties to 25 per cent from 10 per cent on US$200 billion worth of Chinese goods if an agreement is not reached.
While the upcoming negotiations are a positive step, the world’s two largest economies still have many structural economic issues to untangle before they can resolve their differences.
“We’ve made some progress with China in the deputy’s meeting in Beijing … [but] nothing has been resolved, nothing on paper, no contracts,” he said.
However just yesterday Donald Trump has raised the possibility of easing restrictions on Huawei as part of a broader trade deal with Beijing, despite labeling the Chinese telecommunications giant “very dangerous.”




































