custom ad
NewsAugust 27, 2019

WASHINGTON -- U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods are going up. Wait, President Donald Trump says he's having second thoughts. No, no, Trump may actually raise tariffs even higher. He's also demanding U.S. companies leave China. Well, maybe not. The communications on China from Trump and his administration since late last week -- erratic, sometimes contradictory -- are complicating their high-stakes talks with Beijing and elevating the risks to the fragile global economy...

By PAUL WISEMAN and JOE McDONALD ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods are going up. Wait, President Donald Trump says he's having second thoughts. No, no, Trump may actually raise tariffs even higher. He's also demanding U.S. companies leave China. Well, maybe not.

The communications on China from Trump and his administration since late last week -- erratic, sometimes contradictory -- are complicating their high-stakes talks with Beijing and elevating the risks to the fragile global economy.

The messaging has been confusing not just for Chinese officials as they formulate a response to whatever stance the administration is taking. It's also a problem for American businesses. Trump alarmed U.S. companies Friday by threatening to invoke his presidential authority to order them out of China -- a market of 1.4 billion where many American companies have spent decades establishing operations and building relationships with suppliers and customers.

The shifting positions and threats could eventually weaken the U.S. and world economies by leaving businesses paralyzed by uncertainty over whether and where to situate factories, buy supplies and sell products.

"We are on Mr. Trump's Wild Ride," said Jay Foreman, CEO of Basic Fun!, a toy company in Boca Raton, Florida, importing from China. "Never have we ever experienced such an unhinged practice of governance. It's out of control and outrageous."

Negotiating a trade deal with China was always bound to be contentious and subject to fits and starts. The administration has accused Beijing of stealing trade secrets, extracting technology from U.S. companies and unfairly subsidizing its own businesses, and has demanded it stop. What makes a resolution so elusive is the administration's demands would undercut China's drive to achieve prosperity as the global leader in such transformative technologies as artificial intelligence and quantum computing.

Trump's negotiators are also seeking a way to enforce any deal -- arguing, as many independent analysts have, China frequently violated commitments it made to previous U.S. administrations.

The world's two biggest economies have imposed tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of each other's goods in the biggest trade conflict since the 1930s. The hostilities have hurt global trade and investment and strained the decelerating world economy.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

"Trump's contradictory statements and erratic decision-making reflect the fact that he is an undisciplined, tactical thinker who deals with issues and events one-by-one and is guided by no fixed principles or long-term strategic vision," said Jeff Moon, a former U.S. diplomat and trade official specializing in China who is now president of the China Moon Strategies consultancy.

Beijing's negotiators are reluctant to make commitments in the face of what they see as Trump's shifting demands, say economists and businesspeople.

After talks between the two sides collapsed in May, Trump accused Beijing of backtracking on its offers of regulatory changes and market-opening steps. Analysts suggested Beijing was loath to make commitments without knowing whether the administration would soon make new demands.

"This constant flip-flop definitely makes it very hard for the other side to figure out what the American government actually wants," Joerg Wuttke, president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, which represents 1,600 companies, said.

Wuttke suggested Beijing's approach is better coordinated, "whereas I see, Trump has a good day, bad day and, again, no strategy behind it."

Chinese negotiators might be losing faith in Trump's willingness to make a deal and stick to it, agreed Tu Xinquan, director of the China Institute for WTO Studies at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.

"We used to have expectations for Trump," Tu said. "We hoped he was a businessman, more rational and less entangled in political issues. But now it seems his degree of rationality is far below our expectations. Constantly changing. The overall situation is getting worse. Simply put, we have no expectations now and don't expect him to make the right responses and decisions."

Chinese negotiators might have taken note, too, of Trump's trade talks with Mexico. Pressured by U.S. tariffs, the Mexican government yielded last year to Trump's demand to renegotiate a North American free-trade agreement. Yet just as trade between the two seemed to be normalizing, Trump suddenly threatened to impose new taxes on all Mexican goods. He was frustrated, he said, Central American migrants were crossing Mexico en route to the U.S. (Trump dropped the tariff threat once Mexico agreed to do more to stop the migrants.)

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!