China
is waiving punitive tariffs on U.S. soybeans and pork while the two
sides negotiate a trade deal, the Ministry of Finance said Friday.
Beijing
promised in September to lift the tariffs, adding to conciliatory steps
that raised hopes for a settlement. The government announced then that
Chinese importers were placing orders but no details of when the tariff
exemption would take effect were released.
China
is “carrying out the exclusion,” the Ministry of Finance said on its
website. The ministry and the Ministry of Commerce did not respond to
requests for further information.
Negotiators are working on the details of a “Phase 1” agreement announced in October by President Donald Trump.
The
two sides have raised tariffs on billions of dollars of each other’s
goods, disrupting global trade and threatening to depress economic
growth.
Another U.S. tariff hike on an additional $160 billion of Chinese imports is due to take effect Dec. 15.
Chinese
spokespeople have expressed hope for a settlement “as soon as
possible,” but Trump spooked global financial markets this week by
saying he might be willing to wait until after the U.S. presidential
election late next year.
A sticking point is Chinese insistence that Washington must roll back punitive tariffs as part of any deal.
A Chinese spokesman repeated Thursday that Beijing expects such a move in a “Phase 1” agreement.
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