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U.S and China agreed to Stop Trade War at a meeting between Trump and Xi Jinping
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U.S and China agreed to Stop Trade War at a meeting between Trump and Xi Jinping

Dec 2, 2018
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The U.S President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping have agreed to stop a long-running trade war between the United States and China. The new deal will provide a significant amount of relief to global markets. Both world leaders met for a highly anticipated dinner at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires on Saturday evening, in order to resolve the dispute. Trump agreed to stop plans to raise tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods. Trump administration had designed to increase tariffs from 10% to 25% from 1 January 2019.

US and China agree to pause trade war

China immediately responded and made some new taxes on the substantial amount of agricultural, energy and industrial goods from the United States. The truce was struck during a 2-hour dinner between both leaders and their advisers. The concessions will buy time for the two sides to work out a deal covering the areas still in dispute. New trade talks on technology transfer, intellectual property, non-tariff barriers, cyber theft, and agriculture will now take place. Both sides agreed the 10% tariffs if no deal is reached within 90 days and it will be raised to 25%.

The trade dispute between both countries escalated in the month of September when Trump imposed 10% tariffs on $200 billion worth Chinese goods. It was only for China to retaliate with duties worth $110 billion on US products. Beijing has also agreed to reconsider a takeover of chipmaker NXP by a U.S company Qualcomm. It had previously blocked the move on antitrust concerns but it is unclear whether the transaction could be revived, even with China’s agreement.