US team in Beijing for trade talks after IMF \'storm\' warning

US team in Beijing for trade talks after IMF 'storm' warning

AFP  |  Beijing 

US negotiators were in Monday for a new round of high-stakes trade talks, hoping to reach a deal before the March 1 deadline set by as the IMF warned of a possible global economic "storm".

In December, suspended for three months its plan to increase tariffs on USD 200 billion worth of Chinese imports - to 25 per cent from the current 10 per cent - to allow time for negotiators to work out a trade spat that has triggered fears of a global economic slowdown.

Deputy trade was due to lead the US delegation in preparatory meetings to begin on Monday, the had said.

The talks will include officials from the agriculture, and commerce departments.

Gerrish left his hotel in central on Monday morning without talking to the media. Neither side offered any confirmation that talks actually started.

Mnuchin and Lighthizer will be joined by David Malpass, Trump's nominee for of the who has worked to limit the bank's assistance to

The Chinese delegation will be led by Liu He, who will be joined by central

Liu, China's chief trade negotiator, met last month with Trump, who announced that a final resolution of the trade dispute would depend on a meeting with Chinese "in the near future" to iron out the "more difficult points" fuelling the spat.

While the two sides said major progress was made after talks last month in Washington, more recent comments have jarred financial markets, amplifying concerns about how the dispute will affect global growth.

Trump said last week that he did not expect to meet his Chinese counterpart before the trade truce expires on March 1, and top said that while Trump was "optimistic" about a deal, a "sizable distance" still separated the two sides.

is demanding far-reaching changes from to address commercial practices that it says are deeply unfair, including theft of American intellectual property and myriad barriers that US and other foreign companies face in the Chinese domestic market.

has offered to boost its purchases of US goods during the truce, but is likely to resist calls for structural changes to its industrial policy including slashing government subsidies, said of

"The US side will not fully remove the spectre of tariff hikes any time soon," Kuijs said, given that there is "broad support in the US for a hard stance on China".

The two sides have already slapped tariffs on more than USD 360 billion in two-way trade, which has weighed on the two countries' and sent jitters through global markets.

The warned on Sunday of a possible economic "storm" as growth forecasts dip.

It cited the trade row as one of four "clouds" over the global economy, along with financial tightening, Brexit uncertainty, and China's slowdown.

"We have no idea how it (the trade dispute) is going to pan out and what we know is that it is already beginning to have an effect on trade, on confidence and on markets," IMF told the World Government Summit in

Last month, the IMF lowered its global economic growth forecast for this year from 3.7 per cent to 3.5 per cent.

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

First Published: Mon, February 11 2019. 14:15 IST