(Reuters) China will respond firmly if the United States
insists on escalating trade tensions, the foreign ministry said on
Tuesday after U.S. President Donald Trump said further tariffs were
ready to kick in if no deal was reached at a G20 summit this month.
Trump has repeatedly said he is getting ready to meet Chinese
President Xi Jinping at the Osaka summit at the end of June, but China
has not confirmed it.
Trump said last week he would decide after the meeting of the leaders
of the world’s largest economies whether to carry out a threat to
impose tariffs on at least $300 billion in Chinese goods.
On Monday, Trump said he was ready to impose another round of
punitive tariffs on Chinese imports if he cannot make progress in trade
talks with Xi in Osaka.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang again would not be
drawn on confirming a Xi-Trump meeting at G20, saying information would
be released once it was available to the ministry.
“China does not want to fight a trade war, but we are not afraid of
fighting a trade war,” he said, adding China’s door was open to talks
based on equality.
“If the United States only wants to escalate trade frictions, we will resolutely respond and fight to the end.”
U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Tuesday downplayed this
month’s summit in Japan, saying it would not be “a place where anyone
makes a definitive deal.”
“At the G20, at most it will be ... some sort of agreement on a path
forward, but certainly it’s not going to be a definite agreement,” Ross
told CNBC in a television interview.
Tensions between Washington and Beijing rose sharply in May after the
Trump administration accused China of having reneged on promises to
make structural economic changes during months of trade talks.
The United States is seeking sweeping changes, including an end to
forced technology transfers and theft of U.S. trade secrets. It also
wants curbs on subsidies for Chinese state-owned enterprises and better
access for U.S. firms in Chinese markets.
On May 10, Trump raised tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods up
to 25% and took steps to levy duties on an additional $300 billion in
Chinese imports. Beijing retaliated with tariff hikes on a revised list
of $60 billion in U.S. goods.
The U.S. government has also angered China by putting Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd on a blacklist that effectively bans U.S. companies
from doing business with the Chinese firm, the world’s biggest telecoms
equipment maker.
Investors worry China will retaliate by putting U.S. companies on a
blacklist or banning exports to the United States of rare earth metals,
which are used in products such as memory chips, rechargeable batteries
and cell phones.
Source: Reuters; Reporting
by Michael Martina; additional reporting by Susan Heavey in Washington;
Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore
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