WASHINGTON: The United States has welcomed Chinese concessions since the two declared a trade war truce in early December, but trade experts and people familiar with negotiations say Beijing needs to do far more to meet US demands for long-term change in how China does business.
US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, agreed on Dec 1 in Buenos Aires to stop escalating tit-for-tat tariffs that have disrupted the flow of hundreds of billions of dollars of goods between the worlds two biggest economies.
Since then, Beijing has resumed buying US soybeans, the single largest agricultural export between the two countries. China has also cut tariffs on imports of cars from the United States, dialed back on an industrial development plan known as Made in China 2025, and told its state refiners to buy more US oil.
Trump took those as signs that China wants to make a big and very comprehensive deal. But they only start to bring Beijing and Washington back to their pre-trade-war status quo, experts said, and do little to resolve core U.S. demands for structural changes in China to end policies that subsidize large state-owned enterprises and effectively force the transfer of American technology to Chinese firms.
I think these are goodwill gestures, but they dont go beyond offers that were on the table before Trump launched his trade war, said Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow and trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Much more will have to be offered by China to reach an interim agreement in March 2019, Hufbauer said, adding that structural changes would be far harder to agree on, much less achieve, by then.
Trump and Xi agreed on Dec 1 to launch new talks while the United States delayed a planned Jan. 1 tariff increase until March 2.
A spokeswoman for US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, who is leading talks from the American side, did not respond to queries about the significance of Chinas trade steps.
No schedule for face-to-face talks between US and Chinese officials has been announced since Trump and Xi met, but a person familiar with the discussions said meetings would likely take place in early January and that the two sides were in frequent contact.
The first signal that China had resumed purchases of US soybeans came in a Reuters interview last week with Trump, who said Beijing was buying tremendous amounts of soybeans. China had stopped importing the oilseed from the United States in July when the two countries unleashed new tariffs on each others goods.
But the initial purchases of 1.5 million tonnes disappointed traders and were only a fraction of the 30m to 35m tonnes China buys from US farmers in a typical year, with 2017 purchases of $12 billion.
Were glad to have it, and we hope there is more, a person familiar with the US negotiating strategy said of Chinas initial soybean purchases.
Remember, even with the tariffs, the expectations were still for $7 billion worth of soybeans going to China. And we havent seen that. The concession that most captivated Trump was Chinas suspension of a punitive 25pc tariff on US-built vehicles, cutting its tariff rate back to the 15pc global rate it put in place in May.
Derek Scissors, a China scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a business-oriented think tank in Washington, said the move was a reasonable trade step, but taken years too late. He added China would not likely increase imports from the United States because of a slowing market and excess domestic production capacity.
Trump is right to say its a positive move, but in a year hes going to be angry because auto exports to China arent going to have budged, Scissors added.
China also issued guidance to local governments dropping references to its Made in China 2025 high-tech industrial development goals amid reports it was looking to replace the programme aimed at rivaling US dominance in industries such as aerospace, robotics, semiconductors, new energy vehicles, and artificial intelligence.