U.S.-China trade deal that satisfies no one to be signed Wednesday
โWe must bear in mind that the trade war is not over yet โ the U.S. hasnโt revoked all its tariffs on China and China is still implementing its retaliatory measures. There are still many uncertainties down the road.โ
That is the view from Beijing, as told by Taoran Notesย (in Chinese), a WeChat blog that is โaffiliated with the official Economic Daily newspaper that is used by Beijing to manage trade talk expectations,โ the South China Morning Post reports. The post, made yesterday, was the first from the account in two months.
โThe U.S. hasnโt revoked all its tariffs on Chinaโ is a vast understatement.ย According to calculationsย by Chad Brown at the Peterson Institute of International Economics, the โphase oneโ trade deal that is expected to be signed in Washington, D.C. this Wednesday will reduce Trumpโs tariffs by less than 2 percent โ from 21.0 percent to 19.3 percent.
โThe deal isnโt what either side said it had wanted,โย the Wall Street Journal summarizesย (paywall). โThe U.S. doesnโt get the fundamental reforms in Chinese economic policy it sought to help American businesses. And levies remain on about $370 billion of Chinaโs exports.โ
Back to the status quo we go
Trump is preparing to rebrand a preexisting part of U.S. foreign policy and call it a win, even though it changes little in substance, a separate report in the WSJ suggestsย (paywall).ย The upcoming trade pact will establish โat least bi-annual meetings,โ tentatively called the Comprehensive Economic Dialogue โ essentially just a new name for what was called the Strategic and Economic Dialogue in the Obama administration. If this pattern of rebranding sounds familiar, thatโs because itโs exactly what happened with NAFTA.
Another piece of the status quoย that is being restored: The Trump administration has agreed to revokeย its designation of China as a โcurrency manipulator,โ which was made largely as an act of political symbolism last August.
Other reports about the techno-trade war:
โChinaโs commitmentsย in the Phase 1 trade deal with the United States were not changed during a lengthy translation process and will be released this week as the document is signed in Washington, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Sunday,โ Reuters says.
โMuch of the U.S. economy is largely unscathedย by two turbulent years of trade war with China, economic indicators show,โ the WSJ reportsย (paywall). However, โeconomists warn it could take years for the full consequences to be realized.โ
โThe Trump administration is set to ground one of its biggest civilian drone programmesย permanently because the devices have been made at least partly in China,โ the Financial Times reportsย (paywall). Nearly 1,000 drones used by the Department of the Interior are likely to be taken out of service, though โDavid Bernhardt, secretary of the interior, has not yet signed off on a final policy.โ
โGoldman Sachs Group Inc. plans to double its headcount in Chinaย over the next five years,โ from 300 to 600, according to Bloombergย (porous paywall). This plan assumes that China โcontinues down the path of opening up its financial markets.โ Company executives are openly salivating about the โโexplosiveโ growth in asset managementโ opportunities in the country. See also, in Pensions & Investments: Foreign managers see new opportunity from Chinese banks.
โLucas Niewenhuis