ADVERTISEMENT

U.S. Downplays Chance of Breakthrough in China Trade Meeting

The U.S. and China could “spend the next year developing how we deal with each other over a period of time.

U.S. Downplays Chance of Breakthrough in China Trade Meeting
U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Xi Jinping, China’s president, shake hands during a news conference at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Trump administration sought to temper expectations for a swift breakthrough on trade issues with China as a delegation of senior U.S. officials prepares to visit Beijing this week.

“It’s a big, big challenge. There’s a very different system over there and it’s a system that in all honesty has probably worked pretty well for the Chinese,” Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Tuesday at an event at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington. “It has not worked well for us.”

The U.S. and China could “spend the next year developing how we deal with each other over a period of time,” Lighthizer said. “You end up learning how to deal with it, how to kind of manage it, between the two of you, and we’re in the early stages of that,” he said.

Lighthizer will be among senior members of the Trump administration traveling to China this week to discuss trade. He will be joined by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, White House advisers Larry Kudlow and Peter Navarro, and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

China’s state media confirmed the visit Wednesday, saying the top economic adviser to President Xi Jinping, Vice Premier Liu He, will meet with the delegation Thursday and Friday.

Softening Expectations

Earlier Tuesday, Ross played down the possibility of a breakthrough. The meetings will start Thursday and the U.S. officials plan to head home by the weekend, though the trip could be cut short “if it’s not satisfactory,” he said in an interview with CNBC.

“You never know where you are until you actually get into the conference room” and an outcome can’t be prejudged, Ross said. “I wouldn’t be going all the way over there if I didn’t think there was some hope.”

President Donald Trump will have the final say on accepting any U.S. agreement with China, Ross said, indicating he doesn’t expect an announcement immediately from the meetings. “Anything that is discussed over there will come back to the president for approval,” he said. “This won’t be suddenly in Beijing a breathtaking release, everything is resolved.”

The White House is threatening to slap massive tariffs on Chinese imports in a bid to narrow a record U.S. trade deficit with the Asian nation. Beijing’s pledge to retaliate with barriers of its own against American goods has raised the specter of a trade war that the International Monetary Fund cautions could undermine global growth.

Trump wants to break from past administrations that have talked about leveling the trade playing field with China but taken little action, Ross said in the interview. The U.S. trade deficit with the Asian nation has grown too big and is “inspired by evil practices,” he said.

Cautious Optimism

Mnuchin has said he’s cautiously optimistic about the meetings in China.

“I’m looking forward to very frank discussion on the trade issues, and to continue those discussions and see if we can reach a mutual solution to this,” Mnuchin said on Bloomberg Television on Monday.

There’s a “delegation heading to China to begin talks on the Massive Trade Deficit that has been created with our Country," Trump said in a Twitter post on Tuesday. “Very much like North Korea, this should have been fixed years ago, not now. Same with other countries and NAFTA...but it will all get done. Great Potential for USA!”

--With assistance from Saleha Mohsin Scarlet Fu and Miao Han

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Mayeda in Washington at amayeda@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Murray at brmurray@bloomberg.net, Sarah McGregor at smcgregor5@bloomberg.net, Jeff Kearns

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.