I haven't seen anything solid that makes me want to disagree with you.
This week has been filled with conciliatory gestures on both sides. There is trade tension deescalation this month after a good deal of escalation in August.
But, I think you are right that the big issues that Trump pushed for aren't going to get addressed in the October meetings which, allegedly will produce this "interim deal." There are no specifics on what that means ...... all it could mean is that everybody smiles for the Cameras, shakes hands and what the Chinese did today by exempting Ag products from the newer tariffs (roughly 33%) dropping those tariffs back to the SQ (3%) is it.
I don't think Trump can afford politically to thumb his nose at the Chinese again in a "no -deal" showdown like he did in May Allegedly, he was insisting China write the things that may or may not have been agreed on regarding changes to structural policies (subsidizing Chinese companies where it serves the Party's interests, limiting technology transfer) into law and they said no. What this whole thing may turn out to be is a lot of useless bluster from Trump that was temporarily disruptive to the global economy but failed to provide relief to the US and other countries doing business with and in China to the central issues that have been before various trade commissions and unresolved for years.
https://www.politico.com/story/2019/...-delay-1494507
This week has been filled with conciliatory gestures on both sides. There is trade tension deescalation this month after a good deal of escalation in August.
But, I think you are right that the big issues that Trump pushed for aren't going to get addressed in the October meetings which, allegedly will produce this "interim deal." There are no specifics on what that means ...... all it could mean is that everybody smiles for the Cameras, shakes hands and what the Chinese did today by exempting Ag products from the newer tariffs (roughly 33%) dropping those tariffs back to the SQ (3%) is it.
I don't think Trump can afford politically to thumb his nose at the Chinese again in a "no -deal" showdown like he did in May Allegedly, he was insisting China write the things that may or may not have been agreed on regarding changes to structural policies (subsidizing Chinese companies where it serves the Party's interests, limiting technology transfer) into law and they said no. What this whole thing may turn out to be is a lot of useless bluster from Trump that was temporarily disruptive to the global economy but failed to provide relief to the US and other countries doing business with and in China to the central issues that have been before various trade commissions and unresolved for years.
https://www.politico.com/story/2019/...-delay-1494507
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