Trump vows China trade deal will help farmers
October 28, 20191.5K views0 comments
President Donald Trump again Monday said a trade deal is imminent with Beijing which will help American farmers hurt by retaliation in the grinding conflict between the economic powers.
“We’re looking probably to be ahead of schedule to sign very big portion of the China deal, and we will call it to phase one,” Trump told reporters.
The deal will “take care of the farmers” as well as “some of the other things” like banking, he said in another of his impromptu briefings before departing on a trip to Chicago.
Washington and Beijing have exchanged blows for over a year, with tariffs now impacting hundreds of billions of dollars in two-way trade.
Read Also:
US farmers were the first to be targeted with steep duties on soybeans and pork and the Trump administration has rolled out millions of dollars in support programs to help farmers caught in the crossfire.
Now with the 2020 presidential election approaching, and Trump under pressure from the impeachment inquiry in Congress, US trade officials have focused on getting a partial deal in the books.
The US president confirmed that he expects to sign the pact with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the APEC summit in Santiago in mid-November.
The Chinese Commerce Ministry said Saturday both sides agreed to “properly address each other’s core concerns.”
China will lift a ban on US poultry imports while the United States will import Chinese-made cooked poultry and catfish products, it said in a statement.
US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke with China’s Vice Premier Liu He on Friday and said they were “close to finalizing some sections of the agreement,” although they have released few details.
Both sides have said discussions will go on continuously at the deputy level and the top trade officials will have another call “in the near future.”
The White House held off on a massive tariff increase planned for October 15 on $250 billion in Chinese goods but new 15 per cent tariffs on another $150 billion in goods are still scheduled for December.