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| The coronavirus shut down many of the cities in China after the US and China signed a trade deal. Image Credit; upr.org |
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Wednesday that the United States would have to be tolerant if the fast-spreading coronavirus impaired China’s ability to increase purchases of American farm products under the countries’ recently signed trade deal.
China, in the initial deal, signed Jan. 15, promised to buy
at least an additional $12.5 billion worth of U.S. farm products in 2020 and at
least $19.5 billion in 2021 over the 2017 level of $24 billion.
Commodity traders and agricultural economists have
questioned whether Beijing will follow through on pledges in the deal to buy
$36.5 billion of U.S. agricultural goods in 2020, now that the new coronavirus
is threatening China’s economic growth.
“If they’re really trying and it really just blows the
economy out of the water, then we would have to be understanding of that,”
Perdue said, speaking to reporters at a cattle convention in Texas.
Perdue noted he is not part of the government team tasked
with enforcing the terms of the deal. He did not say how the United States
would need to adjust its expectations.
The United States wants China to live up to its pledges,
Perdue said, but trade negotiators could not have anticipated the outbreak.
“There are force majeure type of things ... that I think you
have to be sensitive to,” Perdue said.
The deal text contains a disaster clause, yet to be formally
invoked by Beijing, to allow for delays: “In the event that a natural disaster
or another unforeseeable event outside the control of the Parties delays a Party
from timely complying with its obligations under this Agreement, the Parties
shall consult with each other.”
China has reported that more than 500 people have died in
the outbreak, most in and around the locked-down central city of Wuhan, where
the new virus emerged late last year.
China’s ability to meet its purchase target was in doubt
even before the coronavirus outbreak, because rival soybean supplier Brazil is
harvesting a massive crop, and a deadly pig disease is reducing Chinese demand
for soy used to feed livestock.
“If you will, the coronavirus has given China a the get-out-of-jail card on their obligations,” said Bill Lapp, economist and
president of Nebraska-based Advanced Economic Solutions.
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said on Tuesday
the epidemic would delay a surge in U.S. exports to China expected from the
trade deal.
Reporting by Richard Webinar in Texas and Julie Ingwersen in
Chicago; writing by Tom Polansek and P.J. Huffstutter in Chicago; Editing by
Leslie Adler
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