Washington, Beijing Agree to New Dialogue to Pursue Reforms -- Update
January 11 2020 - 5:27PM
Dow Jones News
By Bob Davis and Alex Leary
WASHINGTON -- The U.S. and China have agreed to semiannual talks
to push for economic reform and resolve disputes, borrowing from a
format from previous administrations that Trump trade officials had
once derided.
The effort will be headed by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, among other senior officials,
according to a statement by Mr. Mnuchin and U.S. Trade
Representative Robert Lighthizer released on Saturday. It is set to
be announced on Jan. 15 as part of the signing of a phase-one trade
deal between the U.S. and China that includes Chinese purchases of
American goods and some reforms to China's economic system. The
deal is the first full pause in the two-year trade war.
The deal includes a dispute-resolution section that envisions
consultations between the two nations to handle any conflicts
arising from the agreement. There will be "at least bi-annual
meetings" between Messrs. Lighthizer and Liu to resolve conflicts,
according to the statement. Mr. Mnuchin will aid Mr. Lighthizer in
that process.
In addition, Mr. Mnuchin will also confer "on a regular basis"
with Mr. Liu on macroeconomic issues, the statement said. Those
sessions are also expected to include Chinese central banker Yi
Gang and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
The new talks will be separate from negotiations over a second
phase of the trade deal, which is expected to cover fundamental
Chinese economic policies, including corporate subsidies and the
activities of Chinese state-owned firms. President Trump recently
said those negotiations may not be concluded until after the
election.
"It's a totally different process" from the trade negotiations,
said an administration official.
The two sides are considering naming the process the
Comprehensive Economic Dialogue, said people familiar with the
discussions. That is the same name the administration used for
failed talks in 2017 to get a quick trade deal in 100 days. Led by
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, those talks claimed broad progress
in agriculture, trade, financial services, investment and energy.
But Mr. Trump dismissed the efforts. His top advisers, including
Mr. Lighthizer, felt that Chinese negotiators were simply
repackaging old offers.
The president told Mr. Ross "to shut it down" and removed him
from running China trade policy, as the U.S. girded for a long
trade battle with China. Mr. Ross said some of the deals he
negotiated back then will be part of a phase-one deal.
"There are many trade initiatives being worked on by the
Administration, and they will be announced when we are ready to
announce them," Mr. Ross said in a statement.
The new economic talks are closer in concept to what was called
the Strategic Economic Dialogue, started in the George W. Bush
administration by then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson. The SED was
a massive annual effort involving many dozens of officials from
both nations. The two sides would put out long lists of plans to
make changes in economic policy -- but had no way of enforcing
them.
In his book "Dealing With China," Mr. Paulson wrote that the SED
led to contracts for U.S. firms, pressure on China to let its
currency rise somewhat and the start of negotiations for an
investment treaty that was never completed. He said the contacts
the two sides made helped the U.S. persuade China not to sell its
huge stockpile of U.S. government bonds during the global financial
crisis of 2009, a move that could have deepened an already painful
downturn.
The Obama administration continued the dialogue but renamed it
the Strategic and Economic Dialogue. Instead of focusing solely on
economic issues, the S&ED looked at national security as well.
From the U.S. side, it was headed by the secretary of state and the
Treasury secretary.
The Trump administration showed no interest in continuing the
dialogue in either format, said administration officials. Trump
trade officials, including White House strategist Steve Bannon, and
trade adviser Peter Navarro dismissed the SED format as a talkathon
that produced no concrete results. Early in the administration, Mr.
Paulson met with Trump officials to encourage them to start their
own version of SED, but he was turned down. The president's
son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, delivered the news to Mr.
Pauslon, according to people familiar with the conversations.
Mr. Bannon was dismissive of efforts to revive the dialogue.
"This is just window dressing and Chinese tapping along of the
West," he said. "It's what President Trump shut down after 100 days
in 2017. We need action, not dialogue."
Myron Brilliant, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's executive vice
president, however, praised the revival of the talks. "There needs
to be a structured process to advance address serious issues with
China so long as at the end of the day there is accountability,
enforceability and concrete action undertaken."
Write to Bob Davis at bob.davis@wsj.com and Alex Leary at
alex.leary@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 11, 2020 17:12 ET (22:12 GMT)
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