China welcomes US trade talks offer as new tariffs loom

AFP  |  Beijing 

welcomed on Thursday a US offer to hold fresh trade talks, adding that the two are discussing the details and providing some hope the world's top economies could step back from the brink of an all-out trade war.

"The Chinese side believes that the escalation of the trade conflict is not in the interest of either party," told reporters at a regular briefing.

"has indeed received an invitation from the US and holds a welcoming attitude to it", said Gao, noting the "two sides are still communicating on the specific details".

of the invite comes as it emerged Thursday that US firms in are beginning to feel the pinch of tariffs already imposed on the Asian giant.

Mnuchin's offer comes just under a week after US threatened to impose tariffs on all USD 500 billion worth of imports from

The possible resumption of negotiations sent Asian markets rallying with Hong Kong surging 2.5 per cent -- having fallen for six straight days and into a bear market -- and more than one per cent higher.

Trump imposed his first phase of tariffs this summer on USD 50 billion of Chinese goods, including high-end and manufactured goods, while fired back dollar-for-dollar at US soybeans, autos and other farm goods.

Top told on Wednesday: "Mnuchin, who is the with China, has apparently issued an invitation. Talking is better than not talking, so I regard this as a plus."

The next wave of 25 per cent tariffs on a further USD 200 billion in imports will loom over any talks -- after a public consultation period for affected businesses came to an end last Thursday.

has pledged to hit back with five to 25 per cent tariffs on USD 60 billion in US imports in retaliation for any measures from the US.

The majority of American companies in China say they are hurting from the escalating trade spat, reporting increased costs, lower profits and stepped-up scrutiny, according to an survey released Thursday.

The business lobby urged to reconsider its approach.

More than half of US firms are already feeling Beijing's wrath from non-tariff measures like heightened regulatory scrutiny, more inspections and slower customs clearance, according to the survey.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, September 13 2018. 14:25 IST