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China-US Geopolitics: News & Discussions

Trump at the beginning of his Presidency should have had the largest amount of political capital to push his healthcare bill, yet he was unable to pass it.

His fellow Republicans destroyed it. :lol:

Trump's weakness even at the beginning of his Presidency is truly "Unpresidented". He has the record of the lowest ever approval ratings after his inauguration.

This strike was an attempt to consolidate his support base at home, but at what cost? His relationship with the Russians, which he spent years building up... now it's all gone down the toilet after a single day. Fantastic.
 
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Besides, set up on display "those 100 million fireworks" while hosting a dignitary guest is completely out of courtesy act... it's an unspoken rudeness that won't go unnoticed and be forgotten. At the end more or less it simply shows some kind of madness (wacko) and unreliable quality.

Among the big guys, such fireworks won't scare anyone... any big guy keeps lots of stocks at base.
The best joke was when after an hour CNN reported the fighter jets from the same base took off and bombed the same town where chemical attack took place and Trump did nothing. Trump has made USA a joke after these attacks. The next statement came from Russia with the destroyer being deployed to the coast of Syria. Iran and Russia both said openly that USA should try bombing now. Nothing happened. After some time Trump dispatches the Naval group to North Korea and suddenly there were reports of an unknown Submarine in the vicinity of the Battle group.

Poor USA feels so alone. NATO is still arguing over the budget lol West has become a joke.
 
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here is some fact so you guys can begin to comprehend why China will continue to be amicable to the USA regardless of how dumb Trump is or how astute xinhua comedians are. The Chinese trade surplus with the USA is three times the US exports to China. You think China will do anything to jeopardize this?
 
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US missile strikes violated all red lines on Syria: Russia, Iran, allied forces

http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2017/...violation-red-lines-Russia-Iran-allied-forces

here is some fact so you guys can begin to comprehend why China will continue its subservience to the USA regardless of how dumb Trump is or how astute xinhua comedians are. The Chinese trade surplus with the USA is three times the US exports to China. You think China will do anything to jeopardize this meal ticket?
World is going to start world war 3 and Indians are only concerned about Chinese trade surplus and Cows. Dear Indians this a new century you need to start treating animals as animals and humans as humans. Please stop being jealous about Chinese trade surplus.
 
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He get 'owned' by 'mainstream' elites , he need to act to show he was 'good guy' in front the elites. Just see and look MSM and his rival politician comment after Syrian strike.
 
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China will offer the Trump administration better market access for financial sector investments and US beef exports to help avert a trade war, according to Chinese and US officials involved in talks between the two governments.

US President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, his Chinese counterpart, decided at their first meeting in Florida last week that they needed rushed trade negotiations to produce results within 100 days. The two concessions on finance and beef are relatively easy for Beijing to make.

At present, foreign investors cannot hold a majority stake in securities and insurance companies in China. The country’s largest companies in these sectors, such as Citic Securities and China Life Insurance, have achieved enormous scale in the 15 years since the world’s second-biggest economy joined the World Trade Organisation, making them formidable competitors for new entrants to the market.

The concession to allow majority foreign ownership was discussed during Barack Obama’s administration, when Chinese and US negotiators held several rounds of talks about a bilateral investment treaty, or BIT.

Mr Trump has not yet said if he intends to pursue the treaty, which US negotiators hoped would address China market access issues in a wide range of industries.

“China was prepared to [raise the investment ceilings] in the BIT but those negotiations were put on hold [after Trump’s election victory],” said one Chinese official involved in the talks. “Had Obama been in office for another six months we would have gotten there.”

China is also willing to end a ban on US beef imports that has been in place since 2003, officials said, and buy more grains and other agricultural products as it seeks to reduce tensions stemming from the $347bn annual trade surplus in goods that it enjoys with its biggest trading partner.

Mr Trump’s campaign threats last year to slap tariffs on Chinese goods and declare Beijing a currency manipulator have raised fears of a destructive trade war between the world’s two largest economies. But since taking office the former reality television star has moderated his rhetoric and cabinet officials have signalled they plan to take a more pragmatic approach.

If concluded, the mooted deal would be welcomed by US financial services companies, which have grown increasingly frustrated in recent years about what they say are rising barriers to doing business in the country. Beef exporters have also complained about the lingering Chinese ban on US imports, which was introduced after a BSE scare in the US herd.

While a comprehensive Sino-US investment treaty remains a distant prospect, both sides are hoping to achieve a number of smaller trade deals in the coming three months.

On Saturday, Mr Trump tweeted that Mr Xi’s two-day visit to his resort at Mar-a-Lago had been “tremendous”, before adding a warning shot.

“Goodwill and friendship was formed,” the US president said in a follow-up tweet. “But only time will tell on trade.”

US officials are pressing their Chinese counterparts to lower their current 25 per cent tariff on automotive imports. Beijing in return would like greater protection for Chinese investment in the US, which tripled last year to more than $45bn, and also for Washington to relax restrictions on the sale of certain high-tech products to China.

The Chinese government may simply commit to buy more US imports in the same way that Japan did in the 1980s.

Chad Bown, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said such a transactional approach would potentially help reduce the US trade deficit in the short term and appeal to Mr Trump’s instincts as a dealmaker. But it would have its limits.

“We’re not going to export a whole lot of steel to China,” Mr Bown said.

Thanks to a state-directed investment stimulus unleashed in the wake of the global financial crisis, Chinese steelmakers now produce more steel than the rest of the world combined. With the Chinese economy now growing at its slowest pace in a quarter century, reduced demand at home has led to a surge in steel exports, causing global prices to collapse.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...with-us/ar-BBzBJet?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp
 
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China will offer the Trump administration better market access for financial sector investments and US beef exports to help avert a trade war, according to Chinese and US officials involved in talks between the two governments.

US President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, his Chinese counterpart, decided at their first meeting in Florida last week that they needed rushed trade negotiations to produce results within 100 days. The two concessions on finance and beef are relatively easy for Beijing to make.

At present, foreign investors cannot hold a majority stake in securities and insurance companies in China. The country’s largest companies in these sectors, such as Citic Securities and China Life Insurance, have achieved enormous scale in the 15 years since the world’s second-biggest economy joined the World Trade Organisation, making them formidable competitors for new entrants to the market.

The concession to allow majority foreign ownership was discussed during Barack Obama’s administration, when Chinese and US negotiators held several rounds of talks about a bilateral investment treaty, or BIT.

Mr Trump has not yet said if he intends to pursue the treaty, which US negotiators hoped would address China market access issues in a wide range of industries.

“China was prepared to [raise the investment ceilings] in the BIT but those negotiations were put on hold [after Trump’s election victory],” said one Chinese official involved in the talks. “Had Obama been in office for another six months we would have gotten there.”

China is also willing to end a ban on US beef imports that has been in place since 2003, officials said, and buy more grains and other agricultural products as it seeks to reduce tensions stemming from the $347bn annual trade surplus in goods that it enjoys with its biggest trading partner.

Mr Trump’s campaign threats last year to slap tariffs on Chinese goods and declare Beijing a currency manipulator have raised fears of a destructive trade war between the world’s two largest economies. But since taking office the former reality television star has moderated his rhetoric and cabinet officials have signalled they plan to take a more pragmatic approach.

If concluded, the mooted deal would be welcomed by US financial services companies, which have grown increasingly frustrated in recent years about what they say are rising barriers to doing business in the country. Beef exporters have also complained about the lingering Chinese ban on US imports, which was introduced after a BSE scare in the US herd.

While a comprehensive Sino-US investment treaty remains a distant prospect, both sides are hoping to achieve a number of smaller trade deals in the coming three months.

On Saturday, Mr Trump tweeted that Mr Xi’s two-day visit to his resort at Mar-a-Lago had been “tremendous”, before adding a warning shot.

“Goodwill and friendship was formed,” the US president said in a follow-up tweet. “But only time will tell on trade.”

US officials are pressing their Chinese counterparts to lower their current 25 per cent tariff on automotive imports. Beijing in return would like greater protection for Chinese investment in the US, which tripled last year to more than $45bn, and also for Washington to relax restrictions on the sale of certain high-tech products to China.

The Chinese government may simply commit to buy more US imports in the same way that Japan did in the 1980s.

Chad Bown, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said such a transactional approach would potentially help reduce the US trade deficit in the short term and appeal to Mr Trump’s instincts as a dealmaker. But it would have its limits.

“We’re not going to export a whole lot of steel to China,” Mr Bown said.

Thanks to a state-directed investment stimulus unleashed in the wake of the global financial crisis, Chinese steelmakers now produce more steel than the rest of the world combined. With the Chinese economy now growing at its slowest pace in a quarter century, reduced demand at home has led to a surge in steel exports, causing global prices to collapse.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...with-us/ar-BBzBJet?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp
Typical American BS reporting. Making sound like China made concession to American. Those investment approve for American investment are non critical sector.

And regards to beef, I don't think we need an expert to tell you with more and more middle class Chinese , they can afford better meat.

It just part of of trade process, nothing abt making concession. The real fact is trump don't have balls to fight trade war with China. It's is no more in the nineties. China is on a same level or better field when comes to trade and economy.

Bring it on if American wants trade war. See who hurts who more! :enjoy:
 
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China will offer the Trump administration better market access for financial sector investments and US beef exports to help avert a trade war, according to Chinese and US officials involved in talks between the two governments.

US President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, his Chinese counterpart, decided at their first meeting in Florida last week that they needed rushed trade negotiations to produce results within 100 days. The two concessions on finance and beef are relatively easy for Beijing to make.

At present, foreign investors cannot hold a majority stake in securities and insurance companies in China. The country’s largest companies in these sectors, such as Citic Securities and China Life Insurance, have achieved enormous scale in the 15 years since the world’s second-biggest economy joined the World Trade Organisation, making them formidable competitors for new entrants to the market.

The concession to allow majority foreign ownership was discussed during Barack Obama’s administration, when Chinese and US negotiators held several rounds of talks about a bilateral investment treaty, or BIT.

Mr Trump has not yet said if he intends to pursue the treaty, which US negotiators hoped would address China market access issues in a wide range of industries.

“China was prepared to [raise the investment ceilings] in the BIT but those negotiations were put on hold [after Trump’s election victory],” said one Chinese official involved in the talks. “Had Obama been in office for another six months we would have gotten there.”

China is also willing to end a ban on US beef imports that has been in place since 2003, officials said, and buy more grains and other agricultural products as it seeks to reduce tensions stemming from the $347bn annual trade surplus in goods that it enjoys with its biggest trading partner.

Mr Trump’s campaign threats last year to slap tariffs on Chinese goods and declare Beijing a currency manipulator have raised fears of a destructive trade war between the world’s two largest economies. But since taking office the former reality television star has moderated his rhetoric and cabinet officials have signalled they plan to take a more pragmatic approach.

If concluded, the mooted deal would be welcomed by US financial services companies, which have grown increasingly frustrated in recent years about what they say are rising barriers to doing business in the country. Beef exporters have also complained about the lingering Chinese ban on US imports, which was introduced after a BSE scare in the US herd.

While a comprehensive Sino-US investment treaty remains a distant prospect, both sides are hoping to achieve a number of smaller trade deals in the coming three months.

On Saturday, Mr Trump tweeted that Mr Xi’s two-day visit to his resort at Mar-a-Lago had been “tremendous”, before adding a warning shot.

“Goodwill and friendship was formed,” the US president said in a follow-up tweet. “But only time will tell on trade.”

US officials are pressing their Chinese counterparts to lower their current 25 per cent tariff on automotive imports. Beijing in return would like greater protection for Chinese investment in the US, which tripled last year to more than $45bn, and also for Washington to relax restrictions on the sale of certain high-tech products to China.

The Chinese government may simply commit to buy more US imports in the same way that Japan did in the 1980s.

Chad Bown, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said such a transactional approach would potentially help reduce the US trade deficit in the short term and appeal to Mr Trump’s instincts as a dealmaker. But it would have its limits.

“We’re not going to export a whole lot of steel to China,” Mr Bown said.

Thanks to a state-directed investment stimulus unleashed in the wake of the global financial crisis, Chinese steelmakers now produce more steel than the rest of the world combined. With the Chinese economy now growing at its slowest pace in a quarter century, reduced demand at home has led to a surge in steel exports, causing global prices to collapse.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...with-us/ar-BBzBJet?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp

Well, that's a win-win solution then :D
 
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China offers concessions to avert trade war with US

Sound more like Xi offers a face saving to Trump with this visite despite the fact he was not very nice with China before he entered into the presidential office, Americans care only about Interest but we Chinese care about both Interest and friendship.
 
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This is what really matters... Not contaminated US beef. Come and compete Russia. Russian soybean and corn taking over US soybean and corn exports to China... :P

Trump is easy to manipulate.


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First trainload of Russian wheat arrives in China
Xinhua, April 9, 2017

A freight train fully loaded with Russian wheat arrived at Manzhouli land port in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Saturday.

This is the first bulk shipment of Russian wheat to enter China via the land port after the two countries reached deals on quarantine inspection requirements for exporting Russian wheat, corn, rice and soybean to China in December 2015.

China's state-owned foodstuff conglomerate COFCO Corp. is responsible for quality control, import and distribution to the Chinese market.

COFCO president Yu Xubo said the group plans to import 1 million to 2 million tonnes of wheat from Russia a year. This may increase to 4 million or 5 million tonnes a year in the future, he said.

Russia replaced the United States as the world's top wheat exporter last year with 25 million tonnes of exports, according to figures provided by the Russian side. :sarcastic:

"Compared with ocean shipping, land transport via Manzhouli cuts travel time and costs," said Chen Lixin, Party chief of Manzhouli City.

He said China's import of Russian wheat is a new breakthrough in bilateral trade and economic cooperation achieved within the framework of the Belt and Road initiative.
 
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It's not a big deal, concession is required to reach to an agreement, cut a deal, stakes exchanged.
 
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Sino-US trade deficit will remain or even widen so long as our American friends/consumers stick to their way of life, i.e. living on borrowed money. :D:D

America has the cash to buy. Borrowed money may be, but they pay back their borrowed money...
 
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"concessions"

whatever you want to call it to feed your ego.

diplomats call this "compromise". trump may offer easier access and greater protection for Chinese investment in the US in return. it's right in your article.
 
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