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U.S. Sees Trump-Xi Meeting Soon as Lighthizer Arrives in Beijing

Facing an economic slowdown at home, China has a strong motivation to address American demands and put an end to the trade war.

U.S. Sees Trump-Xi Meeting Soon as Lighthizer Arrives in Beijing
U.S. President Donald Trump, right, and Xi Jinping, China’s president, greet attendees waving American and Chinese national flags during a welcome ceremony outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Trump administration said the U.S. president still wants to meet China’s Xi Jinping in an effort to end the trade war, a sign of optimism as negotiators from the world’s two-biggest economies start their latest round of talks this week.

“He wants to meet with President Xi very soon,” White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said Monday on Fox News. “This president wants a deal. He wants it to be fair to Americans and American workers and American interests.”

Uncertainty whether the leaders will meet to finalize an agreement has stoked concerns that negotiations are faltering as the March 1 deadline approaches. If there’s no deal by then, President Donald Trump has threatened to more than double the rate of tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese imports.

Negotiators from the two countries are meeting this week in Beijing, with U.S. officials pressing China to commit to deeper reforms to a state-driven economic model that they say hurts American companies. Mid-level officials began discussions Monday in preparation for two days of talks starting Thursday involving U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He. Lighthizer and Mnuchin were seen arriving at a Beijing hotel on Tuesday.

U.S. Sees Trump-Xi Meeting Soon as Lighthizer Arrives in Beijing

Aides to Trump say this week’s talks are important as they need to demonstrate credible progress to both the president and financial markets. But the two sides are only just starting the work of drafting a common document and still tussling over how a deal may be enforced, which U.S. officials have repeatedly called a crucial element.

Possible Extension

As a result some aides privately acknowledge the most likely scenario is for the March 1 deadline to be extended and for tariffs on some $200 billion in Chinese imports not to be raised to 25 percent as Trump as threatened.

The question they are mulling is how to do so while maintaining pressure on the Chinese side and the urgency that has accompanied the current discussions. For that reason some officials are keen for any extension not to be open-ended. They also are eager not to let the timing of a Trump/Xi meeting to close the deal slip much past the end of March.

Chinese would favor such an extension, and some are optimistic about it. "I think there will be positive outcomes from this round of trade talks, because the two sides have shown willingness to seek a deal," said Wei Jianguo, a former vice commerce minister and now vice director of China Center for International Economic Exchanges in Beijing. "Even if no deal is reached in this round of talks, I don’t think tariffs will be hiked on March 1. The highest possibility is that the U.S. will agree to postpone the deadline, buying time for the two leaders to meet and sign off on the final deal."

Maybe Mar-a-Lago

Trump told reporters in January that he planned to meet Xi in late February, though he backtracked on that last week and said a gathering wouldn’t take place this month. It’s still possible the leaders may get together in March at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Conway said Monday, when asked about a report from news agency Axios to that effect. The U.S. president has said no deal will be final until he meets with his Chinese counterpart.

U.S. Sees Trump-Xi Meeting Soon as Lighthizer Arrives in Beijing

“He has forged a mutually respectful relationship with President Xi,” Conway said. “They will meet again soon.”

The last round of talks in Washington late last month resulted in China importing American soybeans as it implemented promises to buy more U.S. goods. While those purchases will provide relief to U.S. farmers, there has been no breakthrough on the structural issues separating the two nations, such as industrial policy, government subsidies, protection of intellectual property or forced transfers of technology.

Strong Motivation

Facing an economic slowdown at home, the Chinese government has a strong motivation to address American demands and put an end to the trade war. It has fast-tracked approval of a law that would ban theft of intellectual property and forced technology transfers, but the question is how much more it can compromise. With the U.S. now pushing a plan of prioritizing spending on artificial intelligence research, it will be difficult to talk China out of its policies to dominate advanced technologies.

And with March 1 approaching, speculation is growing that it will be hard for negotiators to agree to the complete deal demanded by Trump.

“The key is whether the U.S. and China can find common ground,” according to
He Weiwen, a former commerce ministry official and now a senior fellow at the Center for China and Globalization, an independent research group. “It can’t be ruled out that the U.S. would extend the deadline, but still, it’s too early to predict anything.”

--With assistance from James Mayger.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Andrew Mayeda in Washington at amayeda@bloomberg.net;Miao Han in Beijing at mhan22@bloomberg.net;Shawn Donnan in Washington at sdonnan@bloomberg.net;Lucille Liu in Beijing at xliu621@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeffrey Black at jblack25@bloomberg.net, ;Brendan Murray at brmurray@bloomberg.net, ;Malcolm Scott at mscott23@bloomberg.net, Randall Woods

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With assistance from Bloomberg