Top Chinese trade negotiator to head to US for talks

Date: Category:world Views:1 Comment:0


WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) -Senior Chinese trade negotiator Li Chenggang is expected to travel to Washington this week to meet U.S. officials, a United States government spokesperson confirmed.

Li, China's international trade representative and a key negotiator alongside economy tsar He Lifeng, may meet deputy-level U.S. government officials, the spokesperson said, adding that the visit was not part of a formal negotiating session.

The Wall Street Journal first reported on Monday that Li would travel to Washington.

Traders on both sides of the Pacific are watching to see whether this month's latest tariff truce will become permanent or if U.S. President Donald Trump will once again upend global supply chains with a fresh wave of prohibitively high duties on Chinese imports.

U.S. retailers are stocking up ahead of the critical end-of-year holiday season, while Chinese producers - locked out of the world's top consumer economy - say they are in "survival mode", scrambling to secure market share elsewhere to stay afloat.

The world's two largest economies on August 11 agreed to extend their tariff truce for another 90 days, locking in place a 30% tariff on Chinese imports and 10% Chinese duties on U.S. goods.

But once Trump's tariffs top 35%, they become prohibitively high for Chinese exporters, economists warn.

The Chinese commerce ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Li's trip would follow three previous rounds of trade negotiations between the two nations since May - in Geneva, London and, earlier this month, in Stockholm.

The last time a senior Chinese trade negotiator visited the U.S. was in November 2023, when He Lifeng met then-U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in San Francisco, ahead of the 2023 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders' summit in the city.

Then vice-Premier Liu He, He Lifeng's predecessor, was the last top Chinese trade official to travel to Washington for bilateral talks, signing the 'Phase 1' trade deal with the Trump administration in January 2020, committing Beijing to boost purchases of U.S. exports by $200 billion over a two-year period.

(Reporting by Liz Lee and Joe Cash in Beijing, David Lawder in Washington, Devika Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Saad Sayeed and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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