EXCLUSIVE-U.S. demands regular review of China trade reform
(Updates to add quote from the U.S.-China Business Council and
link to explainer on U.S. China-negotiations)
By Michael Martina and Chris Prentice
BEIJING/WASHINGTON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - The United States is
pushing for regular reviews of China's progress on pledged trade
reforms as a condition for a trade deal - and could again resort
to tariffs if it deems Beijing has violated the agreement,
according to sources briefed on negotiations to end the trade
war between the two nations.
A continuing threat of tariffs hanging over commerce between
the world's two largest economies would mean a deal would not
end the risk of investing in businesses or assets that have been
impacted by the trade war.
"The threat of tariffs is not going away, even if there is a
deal," said one of three sources briefed on the talks who spoke
with Reuters on condition of anonymity.
Chinese negotiators were not keen on the idea of regular
compliance checks, the source said, but the U.S. proposal
"didn't derail negotiations."
A Chinese source said the United States wants “periodic
assessments” but it's not yet clear how often.
“It looks like humiliation," the source said. "But perhaps
the two sides could find a way to save face for the Chinese
government."
The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has
imposed import tariffs on Chinese goods to put pressure on
Beijing to meet a long list of demands that would rewrite the
terms of trade between the two countries.
The demands include changes to China's policies on
intellectual property protection, technology transfers,
industrial subsidies and other trade barriers.
An enforcement and verification process is unusual for trade
deals and is akin to the process around punitive economic
sanctions such as those imposed on North Korea and Iran.
Disputes over trade are more typically dealt with through
courts, the World Trade Organization (WTO) or through
arbitration panels and other dispute settlement mechanisms built
into trade agreements.
Trump's team has criticized the WTO for failing to hold
China accountable for not executing on promised market reforms.
The U.S. has also criticized the WTO's dispute settlement
process and is seeking reforms at the organization.
(For an explainer on how the U.S.-China talks differ from
any other trade negotiation, see: )
Regular reviews would be one potential solution to address a
demand from U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer for
ongoing verification of any trade pact between the two
countries, three sources familiar with the talks told Reuters.
The threat of tariffs would be used to keep reform on track, the
sources said.
Lighthizer is leading negotiations with China. A USTR
spokesman declined to comment on the possibility of regular
assessments.
The idea of quarterly reviews of quarterly reviews was part
of a U.S. negotiating document leaked after talks in May 2018,
before the United States had slapped its first round of duties
on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods.
The renewed focus on regular reviews in current negotiations
- this time carrying the threat of tariffs - underscores the
growing distrust between the two countries.
The extra scrutiny is needed and should be based on clear
benchmarks - with consequence for failing to meet them, said
Erin Ennis, Senior Vice President of the U.S.-China Business
Council, a trade group representing American companies doing
business in China.
“It needs to be tied to removing or reducing the tariffs,"
Ennis said. "If China can show compliance through a process like
this, it would also be a trust-building measure for both sides.”
BROKEN PROMISES
Trump's administration has accused China of repeatedly
failing to follow through on previous pledges to implement
reforms sought by the United States.
Washington often cites as an example the difficulties still
faced by foreign payment card operators in entering China's
market despite a 2012 WTO ruling that Beijing was discriminating
against them.
A separate industry source said it is likely that different
agreement on separate issues - forced technology transfer,
intellectual property, changes to China's legal system - would
require separate verification processes, all of which will need
to be hammered out by negotiators.
"The challenge of verification and enforcement stems from
the fact that China has made promises it hasn't kept," the
source said.
Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to a 90-day
truce in the trade war in December to give their teams time to
negotiate a deal. Nearly 50 days later, there is little sign
that China will make the concessions the U.S. is seeking.
Lighthizer saw no progress on structural issues at three
days of mid-level talks in Beijing last week, Republican Senator
Chuck Grassley said on Tuesday.
China's Vice Premier and lead negotiator Liu He is due to
visit Washington for the next round of talks with Lighthizer and
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the end of the month.
(Reporting by Michael Martina in Beijing and Chris Prentice in
Washington
Additional reporting by David Lawder in Washington
Editing by Simon Webb and Brian Thevenot)
First Published: 2019-01-18 20:24:00
Updated 2019-01-18 23:27:09
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