BUENOS
AIRES - The United States and China on
Saturday announced a ceasefire in their tariffs war, hours after US President
Donald Trump upended another international forum by snubbing G20 action on
trade disputes and climate change.
Over a dinner of
steaks and Argentine wine in Buenos Aires, Trump and President Xi Jinping
brokered a truce to ensure that -- for now -- there will be no further
escalation to their tit-for-tat imposition of tariffs on goods worth hundreds
of billions of dollars.
Trump withdrew
his threat to raise the US tariffs even more on January 1, in return for a
promise from China to buy more US goods and enter into a 90-day period of talks
to resolve their differences.
US, China in trade tariffs truce after tense G20 summit
Those include
market access for US companies and protecting their intellectual property from
theft by Chinese rivals.
Absent agreement in that time, tariffs now set at 10 percent
will be raised to 25 percent, according to a White House statement.
"This was an amazing and productive meeting with
unlimited possibilities for both the United States and China," Trump said
in the statement, released as he flew home from a stormy trip spent accosting
his fellow leaders at the world s pre-eminent economic forum.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters in Buenos
Aires: "It is conducive not only to the development of the two countries
and the well-being of the Chinese and American people, but also to stable
growth of the world economy."
The Sino-US trade war sparked warnings at the G20 of the
cost to the global economy if it continued unabated. Not long before the
Trump-Xi dinner, the annual summit concluded in the Argentine capital with a
watered-down statement.
The G20 communique was finally adopted after all-night
haggling by negotiators ensured that the summit in crisis-hit Argentina at
least finished with a joint platform, unlike recent G7 and Asia-Pacific summits
where Trump s objections caused unprecedented breakdowns.
Apart from the United States, all other G20 members agreed
to implement the "irreversible" Paris Agreement on climate change,
ahead of a UN summit on the planetary threat starting next week in Poland, it
said.
But it said the "United States reiterates its decision
to withdraw from the Paris Agreement," mirroring the divergence seen last
year when Trump shocked the global community by bucking the consensus at his
first G20.
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