US-China trade talks stalled due to Hong Kong legislation

  02 December 2019    Read: 1410
US-China trade talks stalled due to Hong Kong legislation

The United States-China trade negotiations have stalled due to the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act passed by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump, news website Axios cited sources close to the matter as saying, AzVision.az reports citing Sputnik.

The source told Axios there is little certainty as to when the much-anticipated “phase one” of the US-China trade negotiations will be sealed as time is needed to allow Chinese domestic politics to calm.

The document which Trump signed on Thursday introduced amendments to existing US policy on Hong Kong allowing Washington to impose sanctions on officials in the special administrative region. Another part of the legislation prohibits the US from exporting certain police equipment to Hong Kong.

China condemned the legislation at once, with Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang labelling the move as double-standards and interference in China's internal affairs.

In October, Trump announced that both sides had reached a "substantial phase one deal," which was expected to be finalized in the near future. However, after the APEC Summit in mid-November was cancelled in Chile, where Trump was supposed to be meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping to sign the trade deal, both sides appeared to be struggling to finalize the new "phase one" trade deal.

The world’s two leading economies have been engaged in a trade war for over a year over what Trump deemed unfair economic conditions and non-competitive behaviour from China. China has denied such claims, saying that the trade row is not beneficial to the either side and the world economy. The standoff translated into tit-for-tat hiking of tariffs in imported goods between the countries.


More about: #US   #China  


News Line