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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.29+0.6%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

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To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (187955)5/23/2022 9:07:17 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) of 217591
 
In the meantime, let us watch to see if Team Biden will do an Azovstal-esque evacuation, or Afghanistan-esque rug-pull on rest of teams and turn-tail on self-sanctioning

narrative detector sensed 'Strategic'

spin-o-meter reckon 'trade war win w/ honour' might be soonest

Shanghai shut tighter than tight ala people's war meme

bloomberg.com

US Must Be ‘Strategic’ on China Tariffs, Trade Chief Says

Katherine Tai says US must ‘keep our eye on the ball’ Biden has said he’ll consider removing some China tariffs

Matt Shirley24 May 2022, 08:46 GMT+8



Katherine Tai

Photographer: Bryan van der Beek/BloombergThe US must be “strategic” when it comes to a decision on whether to remove China tariffs, Trade Representative Katherine Tai said a day after President Joe Biden mentioned he would review Trump-era levies as consumer prices surge.

“With respect to the tariffs, our approach as with everything in this relationship, is to be strategic,” Tai said on Tuesday in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Shery Ahn and Haidi Lun. “We have to keep our eye on the ball in terms of how to effectively realign the US-China trade and economic relationship.”

Tai wouldn’t say whether the administration would remove the tariffs, or give a time frame for making a decision.

“All options are on the table in terms of how we address our short-term economic needs, but our eye must be on the ball with respect to the medium and long term needs for the United States to realign this economic and trade relationship,” she said.

Biden on Monday said he’s considering removing some of the tariffs and would talk with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen about it after returning to the US from Asia. The offshore yuan jumped as much as 0.7% in reaction to those comments and reached the strongest level since May 5.

Tai earlier this month said that while relief from U.S. tariffs on China is one option under consideration to confront the fastest inflation in four decades, the duties should be studied in the context of broader economic policy. She dismissed March research from the Peterson Institute for International Economics, which estimated that eliminating a wide array of tariffs, including those on Chinese goods, could reduce inflation by 1.3 percentage points.

Read more on US-China trade:
Biden Extends Yuan Rally With Talk of China Tariff Review Biden Team Splits on New Rules for U.S. Investments in China U.S. Trade Chief Signals Tariff Relief an Option as Prices Soar US Unveils 13-Nation Economic Pact to Assert Asia Leadership

Her comments contrasted with Yellen, who last month suggested the U.S. is open to scaling back the widespread Trump-era tariffs on merchandise imports from China to help provide relief to Americans. While Yellen has tended to focus more on the cost that tariffs impose on American consumers, Tai has highlighted the leverage that they provide at the negotiating table.

The Biden administration earlier this month also took the first step toward a review of tariffs on more than $300 billion in Chinese imports, which is required to prevent them from automatically expire in July. Some economists, lawmakers and the US Chamber of Commerce have pressured the administration to reduce or eliminate the tariffs.

Former President Donald Trump imposed tariffs after an investigation concluded China stole intellectual property from American companies and forced them to transfer technology. China then responded with its own taxes on imports.

Biden on Monday highlighted that he himself hadn’t imposed the tariffs, but rather inherited them from his predecessor.

Aides within the administration have also expressed wariness to suspend tariffs and risk appearing soft on China ahead of the November congressional elections. The Biden administration on Monday unveiled the 13-nation Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, which doesn’t include any tariff reductions, in a bid to reassert US leadership on economic issues in the region.
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