Trump
Claims He’s Negotiating With China on Trade. China Says Otherwise.
President
Trump said that “we’re meeting with China” on tariffs, comments aimed at
soothing jittery financial markets. But Chinese officials say no talks have
taken place.
Ana Swanson Jonathan Swan
By Ana
Swanson and Jonathan Swan
April 25,
2025
Updated
12:25 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/us/politics/trump-china-tariffs-xi-jinping.html
President
Trump, whose trade war with China has rattled financial markets and threatened
to disrupt huge swaths of trade, suggested on Friday that he had been in touch
with Xi Jinping, China’s president, even as Chinese officials insisted that no
negotiations were occurring.
In an
interview with Time on Tuesday, Mr. Trump said Mr. Xi had called him, though he
declined to say when, and asserted that his team was in active talks with China
on a trade deal. Asked about the interview outside the White House on Friday
morning, the president reiterated that he had spoken with the Chinese president
“numerous times,” but he refused to answer when pressed on whether any call had
happened after he imposed tariffs this month.
Mr. Trump’s
comments appeared aimed at creating the impression of progress with China to
soothe jittery financial markets, which have fallen amid signs that the world’s
largest economies are in a standoff. The S&P 500 is down 10 percent since
Mr. Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration.
But the
president’s claims of talks have been rejected by Chinese officials, who have
repeatedly denied this week that they are actively negotiating with the United
States.
“China and
the U.S. have not held consultations or negotiations on the issue of tariffs,”
Guo Jiakun, the spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, said in a news
conference on Friday. “The United States should not confuse the public.”
Chinese
officials have repeatedly said the United States should stop threatening China
and engage in dialogue on the basis of equality and respect. On Thursday, He
Yadong, a spokesman for China’s Commerce Ministry, said there were “no economic
and trade negotiations between China and the United States.”
“Any claims
about progress in China-U.S. economic and trade negotiations are baseless
rumors without factual evidence,” he said. The Chinese Embassy in Washington
declined to comment on Friday, and White House spokespeople did not respond to
a request for comment.
Mr. Trump
ratcheted up tariffs on Chinese imports to a minimum of 145 percent this month,
in a bid to force China into trade negotiations. But Chinese officials
responded by issuing their own tariffs on American products and clamping down
on exports to the United States of minerals and magnets that are necessary for
many industries, including the defense sector.
The Chinese
also appear to have ignored Mr. Trump’s suggestions that the best way to
resolve the issue would be for Mr. Xi to get in touch with him directly. With
the two governments at an impasse, businesses that rely on sourcing products
from China — varying from hardware stores to toymakers — have been thrown into
turmoil. The triple-digit tariff rates have forced many to halt shipments
entirely.
Trump
officials have admitted that the status quo with China on trade is not
sustainable, and some have considered paring back levies on the country. But
the White House insists it will not do that unless a deal is reached for China
to do the same.
Asked in the
Time interview if he would call Mr. Xi if the Chinese leader did not call
first, Mr. Trump said no.
“We’re
meeting with China,” he said. “We’re doing fine with everybody.”
Mr. Trump
also said, without evidence, that he had “made 200 deals.” He claimed that he
would finish and announce them in the next three to four weeks.
Mr. Trump
announced higher “reciprocal” tariffs on nearly 60 countries at the beginning
of April. The White House has since said it received requests from dozens of
countries to negotiate trade terms, and Peter Navarro, the White House trade
adviser, has said the administration would strike “90 deals in 90 days.”
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said this week that the Trump
administration had received 18 proposals on paper and that the trade team was
“meeting with 34 countries this week alone.”
But many
trade experts have expressed skepticism, given that past U.S. trade deals have
taken on average over a year to negotiate.
The
president told Time that trade with countries like China had been unfair and
needed to be changed. “You can’t let them make a trillion dollars from us,” he
said.
Mr. Trump
said he would look individually at companies seeking exemptions from tariffs.
He also said he had a list of products that would be fine to import. “There are
some products I really don’t want to make here,” he said.
But Mr.
Trump insisted that tariffs were encouraging companies to move back to the
United States, and that he would consider having high tariffs a year from now a
“total victory” because the country would be “making a fortune.”
“This is a
tremendous success,” he said. “You just don’t know it yet.”
In public,
Mr. Trump has been saying that his tariffs are working out well, that countries
are coming to him begging for deals and that everything will work out
beautifully for the American people.
In private,
the president’s team has been less cheery. Major retailers have briefed Mr.
Trump on their expectations for empty store shelves if his tariffs are kept in
place. His top economic advisers, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce
Secretary Howard Lutnick, were so alarmed by the sell-off in the bond markets,
and the potential for a widespread financial panic, that they urged Mr. Trump
to put a 90-day pause on his reciprocal tariffs two weeks ago.
Since then,
his team has focused on how to de-escalate his trade war with China without
appearing to have capitulated.
Mr. Trump
and some of his advisers believed that the Chinese economy would be highly
vulnerable to U.S. tariffs, given the country’s dependence on exporting to the
United States. But they appear to have misunderstood the extent of the
president’s leverage over Mr. Xi.
Chinese
officials have made clear, through their statements to the news media, that
they have not appreciated the bullying tone from Mr. Trump and that any
negotiations need to be run through a formal process.
Beijing has
also carefully censored and curated information in China about the trade war,
and emphasized the country’s resilience and ability to withstand pain.
Mr. Trump,
meanwhile, has seen his poll numbers drop. His approval rating on the economy —
always a strength for him — has now become a weakness. Republican lawmakers
fear a wipeout in the 2026 midterms, compounding the pressure on Mr. Trump to
make deals that will restore a sense of economic well-being.
Eswar
Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University and the former head
of the China division for the International Monetary Fund, said both countries
seemed to recognize the need to begin negotiations but each wanted to initiate
them on their own terms.
“The
narrative in Beijing seems to have shifted in recent days, with policymakers
there stiffening their backs and feeling that they can ride this out,” he said.
“Their perception seems to be that the Trump team will come to them as the U.S.
economy is suffering proportionately more damage from the escalating trade
war.”
Ana Swanson
covers trade and international economics for The Times and is based in
Washington. She has been a journalist for more than a decade.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário