ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

China again flags tariff cuts for US agricultural trade after Trump-Xi meeting, but still no details

China again flags tariff cuts for US agricultural trade after Trump-Xi meeting, but still no details

By Ella Cao, Daphne Zhang and Lewis JacksonWed, May 20, 2026 at 5:59 AM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: Soybeans are irrigated in Platte County, Nebraska, U.S. August 22, 2022. REUTERS/Karen Braun/File Photo

By Ella Cao, Daphne Zhang and Lewis Jackson

BEIJING, May 20 (Reuters) - China and the U.S. have agreed to cut tariffs on agricultural trade as part ‌of a broader trade deal, the Ministry of Commerce said on Wednesday ‌in a statement that left several questions about implementation unanswered.

U.S. President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart, Xi ​Jinping, met in Beijing last week, where the White House said China agreed to buy $17 billion worth of U.S. agriculture annually on top of an existing multi-billion-dollar soybean commitment.

The commitment would take Chinese imports of U.S. agriculture back towards all-time highs, but fulfilling it would ‌likely require Beijing to drop ⁠its tariffs imposed during the trade war.

Both parties "in principle agreed to include relevant [agricultural] products in the reciprocal tariff reduction framework, while also setting ⁠guiding goals to expand two-way trade in agricultural products," the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement that largely echoed one made on Saturday.

The statement did not say what products ​could be ​included or mention the $17 billion commitment.

Advertisement

Chinese readouts tend ​to be more circumspect than those ‌from Washington. Beijing bought 12 million tons of soybeans late last year as part of a deal agreed upon at a summit in October, though it never acknowledged the commitment in public.

The statement also referenced the board of trade which will be set up to select and oversee $30 billion worth of goods where tariffs will be reduced ‌to historic levels or lower.

"We think the Chinese side ​will focus those reductions on U.S. agricultural products," ​said Even Rogers Pay, a director ​at Trivium China.

"The $17 billion purchase agreement and 25 million metric tons ‌soybean deal, together, would roughly total out ​to just over $30 billion."

The ​statement also said China had re-certified U.S. beef company registrations, as Reuters reported last week, and that it would resume poultry exports from some U.S. states ​where there had been avian ‌influenza outbreaks.

China also said it would discuss agricultural biotechnology issues that were of ​concern to Washington, without elaborating.

(Reporting by Ella Cao, Daphne Zhang and Lewis ​Jackson in Beijing; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Money”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.