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Trump optimistic a partial trade deal with China will be signed next month

Tuesday, October 22nd 2019 - 09:30 UTC
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“We'll be able to, we think, sign a completed document with China on phase one,” Trump said at the White House. “We'll be able to, we think, sign a completed document with China on phase one,” Trump said at the White House.

US President Donald Trump on Monday said progress in developing the text of a partial trade pact with China means he will likely be able to sign it next month. Trump remains upbeat on the chances Beijing and Washington will seal the mini-deal he announced earlier this month - marking a cooling-off period in the two nations' damaging trade war.

“We'll be able to, we think, sign a completed document with China on phase one,” Trump said at the White House.

US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said efforts to commit the agreement to paper before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Chile next month are “on track” though some work remains to be done.

“Our target is to have the phase one deal by the time you go to Chile,” Lighthizer told Trump.

Trump has said he expects to sign the partial deal on the sidelines of the summit when he meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

While details are scant, the new mini-deal includes a surge in Chinese purchases of US farm exports and also covers intellectual property, financial services and currency exchange, according to the White House.

Trump said on Monday the Chinese “have started the buying.”

China sounded a positive note at a defense forum being held in Beijing, with the vice minister of foreign affairs saying they wanted “China-US relations based on coordination, cooperation and stability.”

With hundreds of billions of dollars in two-way trade now subject to additional tariffs, there are mounting signs the trade war - now in its second year - has damaged the world economy, adding to pressure on both sides to strike a deal.

“We don't approve the tactic of brandishing the baton of tariffs at every turn and exerting maximum pressure on China,” said China's Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Yucheng. “This practice is old thinking and will not work.”

However, US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said earlier on Monday that the US side is not rushing to sign on the dotted line next month.

“We would like to make a deal,” Ross told Fox Business on Monday.

“But from our point of view, it has to be the right deal and it doesn't have to be in November.”

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