US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said today he will be pushing China and the EU to agree to a more "balanced" relationship on trade when he meets with finance ministers at the Group of 20 convention in Buenos Aires.
Mnuchin arrived in the Argentine capital at the end of a week in which US President Donald Trump has ramped up his inflammatory remarks and threats with regard global trade.
Trump described China, the EU and Russia as trade "foes" and threatened to hammer the entire USD 500 billion in goods the US imports from China with punitive tariffs.
"It is definitely a realistic possibility so I wouldn't minimize the possibility. We've been very clear with our objectives," Mnuchin told reporters ahead of the start of the two-day G20 summit amongst finance ministers and central bankers from the world's 20 leading economies.
"We share a desire to have a more balanced relationship and the balanced relationship is by us selling more goods (to China)." The US trade in goods deficit with China stood at almost USD 376 billion in 2017.
"Although the objective is to cut the trade deficit, the desire to do that is for them to open up their markets so we can compete fairly and increase our exports," he said.
"I think it's a tremendous opportunity for us and a tremendous opportunity for China.
"China has a large, growing population that will consume more products and that likes American products." He pointed to energy, agriculture and technology as areas in which the US could boost its Chinese presence.
But Mnuchin said joint ventures were a major stumbling block between the two countries, particularly when it comes to technology, stating that other than in certain "security" related cases, "companies are free to do business in the US without setting up joint ventures."
"There's a very large, growing opportunity, if we can reach agreement, that is good for China, good for their economy and good for US companies."
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