China and U.S. to hold trade talks in Beijing on Jan 7-8

Reuters  |  BEIJING 

(Reuters) - and the will hold vice ministerial level trade talks in on Jan. 7-8, as the two sides look to end a dispute that is inflicting increasing pain on both economies and roiling global financial markets.

The two nations have been locked in a trade war for much of the past year, disrupting the flow of hundreds of billions of dollars worth of goods and stoking fears of a global economic slowdown.

A working team led by Deputy U.S. Trade will come to to have "positive and constructive discussions" with Chinese counterparts, China's commerce ministry said in a statement on its website.

The ministry said the two sides "confirmed" the dates in a phone call on Friday morning, but did not provide other details.

At a summit in late last year, U.S. and Chinese agreed to a ceasefire, deciding to hold off on imposing more tariffs for 90 days starting Dec. 1 while they attempt to negotiate a deal.

Now and the face a key March deadline for talks to end the damaging trade war, or could proceed with a sharp hike in U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods originally set for Jan. 1 and could retaliate.

Trump has said talks toward a deal are progressing well, but it is unclear if Beijing will yield to key U.S. demands over trade imbalances, market access, and alleged Chinese abuses of intellectual property.

Data this week showed a marked loss of momentum in the world's two largest economies at the end of last year.

U.S. factory activity slowed more than expected in December, according to the (ISM), while Chinese data on Monday showed its contracted for the first time in more than two years.

(Reporting by and Judy Hua; Editing by & Kim Coghill)

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

First Published: Fri, January 04 2019. 08:45 IST