Trump: My Plan B With China on Trade is to Reduce Business With China

Trump: My Plan B With China on Trade is to Reduce Business With China

Earlier, the president threatened to slap tariffs on the remaining $300 billion in Chinese goods coming into the United States unless Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to meet with him at the G20 meeting in Osaka, Japan to hammer out a trade deal favourable to Washington.

President Donald Trump has reiterated his promise to slap additional tariffs on China if a trade deal is not reached, saying that he was “happy” with things as they are and that China needed the deal more than the US did since its economy was hit hard by the existing restrictions.

“I would do additional tariffs, very substantial additional tariffs, if that doesn’t work, if we don’t make a deal,” Trump said. “China’s economy is going down the tubes – they want to make a deal,” he stressed, speaking to Fox News Business on Wednesday morning.

The president said that the US could hold off on fresh tariffs if a deal is reached at the G20 meeting. The new tariffs could amount to a 10 percent tax on all Chinese imports into the United States, rather than the 25 percent figure mentioned earlier, Trump clarified.

Trump added that the US side has been talking to its Chinese counterparts on the trade issue over the past few days.

During the interview, Trump also took a shot at Vietnam, another major US trade partner, saying US negotiators have been talking to Vietnamese officials over Hanoi’s approach to trade with the US, which Trump said is even ‘worse than China.’

Germany ‘Delinquent’ on Its NATO Obligations

Turning to NATO defence, the president accused Germany of being “delinquent” on its NATO defence spending obligations while spending “billions and billions” on Russian energy.

“So Germany is paying Russia billions and billions of dollars for energy, okay,” Trump said. “So they are giving Russia billions of dollars yet we are supposed to protect Germany and Germany is delinquent, okay?”

The US and China were thrust into a tit-for-tat tariff spat in mid-2018, when the Trump administration slapped a 25 percent tariff on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods. Since then, the economic superpowers hit one another with several more rounds of tariffs, with Trump recently threatening to put import duties on the remaining estimated $300 billion of Chinese goods coming to the US unless a deal can be worked out. At a campaign rally last week, Trump promised that the US would hammer out a fair trade deal with Beijing or walk away entirely.

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Sourse: sputniknews.com

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