US, Taiwan Officials Discuss Trade, Plan Meeting ‘In Coming Weeks’: USTR

US, Taiwan Officials Discuss Trade, Plan Meeting ‘In Coming Weeks’: USTR
Trade Representative Katherine Tai testifies before the Senate Finance Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, on May 12, 2021. (Susan Walsh/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
Reuters
6/10/2021
Updated:
6/10/2021

U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai discussed trade and investment issues with Taiwan minister John Deng on June 10 and agreed to convene a meeting of the countries’ Trade and Investment Framework Agreement Council “in coming weeks,” Tai’s office said in a statement.

“Ambassador Tai emphasized the importance of the U.S.–Taiwan trade and investment relationship and explained the Biden-Harris administration’s worker-centered trade priorities,” the USTR’s office said.

Taiwan had been “cautiously optimistic” about resuming stalled high-level trade talks with Washington this year, after U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken signaled a possible resumption on June 7.

The Biden administration has moved to reaffirm its strong commitment to the Chinese-claimed, democratically governed island in the face of pressure from Beijing to try and assert its sovereignty.

While Taiwan has long angled for a free trade deal with the United States, trade and investment talks between the two have been stalled since the Obama administration.

A senior official at Taiwan’s economy ministry told Reuters they hope to resume the Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) talks this year.

The USTR statement didn’t provide specific timing of the meeting, which it said would come under the auspices of the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States.

The TIFA talks stalled after former President Barack Obama left office in 2016 and his successor Donald Trump’s trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, imposed tariffs on China, the world’s second-largest economy.

Any such agreement with Taiwan is likely to anger the Chinese regime, which views the self-ruled island as part of its territory, even though Taiwan has been governed as a distinct entity for more than seven decades.

While Taiwan is a member of the World Trade Organization, many countries are wary of signing trade deals with the tech powerhouse, fearing objections from China, although Taiwan does have free trade deals with Singapore and New Zealand.

Last year, Taiwan’s government lifted a ban on the import of pork containing a leanness-enhancing additive, ractopamine, removing a major stumbling block to a deal with Washington.

However, Taiwan will hold a referendum in late August on whether to resume the ban on the import of pork containing ractopamine. The outcome could affect trade talks with Washington.