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Trump expects China trade war decision within four weeks by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) March 14, 2019 President Donald Trump said Thursday that trade war negotiations with China should wrap up within four weeks and expressed optimism about striking a deal. "We are doing very well with China talks," he told reporters. "We are getting what we have to get." Later, at a Saint Patrick's Day celebration in the White House with the Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, Trump predicted results in the near future. "We'll have news on China probably -- one way or way or the other, we're going to know over the next three to four weeks," Trump said. Despite Trump's upbeat assessment, the two sides continue to lock horns on the hugely complex dispute between the world's biggest economies. Earlier this week, Trump said there was still no plan for him to hold a summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Trump said Wednesday he is "in no rush" for a deal but that there is "a very good chance" for one. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told a congressional committee earlier Thursday that he expects the deal to be finalized soon, but cautioned that the process is complex. "We are working diligently but there are 150 pages documents that we are working on," Mnuchin said in response to a question. The accord will include "very clear enforcement provisions and we want to get the agreement right," he said. "That's more important that the exact timing." Trump had said he expected to hold a summit with Xi Jinping late this month at his Florida golf resort. However, Bloomberg reported that the "signing summit" had been pushed back a month as negotiators struggled to resolve their eight-month trade war.
Britain eyes Brexit 'no-deal' trade shift to China London (AFP) March 13, 2019 Britain on Wednesday unveiled a contingency trade policy that favours global giants such as China over EU countries in case of a messy divorce from the bloc. London is bracing for the worst as it races toward the March 29 Brexit deadline without a plan for unwinding its 46-year involvement in the European project. A sudden "no-deal" split would see an end to the current free trade arrangements between Britain and its EU partners overnight. The government said it would mitigate the damage on ... read more
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