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Trump, China sign new trade deal staving off impending tech tariffs, Ars Technica

Trump, China sign new trade deal staving off impending tech tariffs, Ars Technica


    

      cover charge –

             

There are still more tariffs than there used to be, but no new ones at least.

      

      
        

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The full agreement ( PDF

Under the terms of the new deal, China will purchase an additional $ 200 billion worth of US goods and services over the next two years. Expertsestimatethat US exports to China this year would pass the $ billion mark in the next

The arrangement also agrees to ease existing tariffs on several categories of imported goods and avoid adding them to others. Tariffs on about $ billion in goods will also be cut in half from their current level of 19 percent to 7.5 percent. The list (The PDF

consumer electronics, including laptop and tablet computers, monitors and other peripherals, video game consoles, and smartphones were slated to face a new – percent tariff rate in December. The video game industry, among others, asked the administration (PDF) to exempt its products from the tariffs, arguing at the time that the resulting price increases would “injure consumers, video game developers, retailers, and console manufacturers; put thousands of high-value, rewarding US jobs at risk; and stifle innovation in our industry and beyond. “

Those tech tariffs have been staved off, but mostpreviously imposed tariffs

found that US importers have paid about $

In addition to changing the rates at which certain goods are taxed, the new agreement includes chapters surrounding intellectual property and the forced transfer of technology.

It is not uncommon for China to require foreign companies

The new trade agreement severely curtails that practice, saying that any transfer or licensing terms between US and China firms “must be based on market terms that are voluntary and reflect mutual agreement. ” Neither party to the agreement, meaning the United States and China, “shall require or pressure, formally or informally, persons [including corporations] of the other party to transfer technology to its persons as a condition” of receiving permission to operate in the other party’s market, the agreement says.

The pact also addresses intellectual property theft. Under the terms of the deal, China agrees to enact measures to limit “trade secret misappropriation,” including when it occurs through electronic intrusions, systems breaches, and flat-out “unauthorized disclosure.” The agreement does not require the US to strengthen its trade secret law, instead saying the US “affirms that existing US measures afford treatment equivalent” to the terms of the new deal.

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