U.S.-China tariff pause not set, say Bessent, Greer

Watch CNBC's full interview with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent

A potential extension of a tariff pause between the United States and China will not be agreed to until President Donald Trump signs off on the plan, U.S. negotiators said Tuesday.

Trump “has final say on all the trade deals” and the pending tariff truce, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC’s Eamon Javers.

The remarks came after top trade officials for the two countries concluded talks in Stockholm, Sweden, their third round of high-level discussions since May.

“We’re going to head back to Washington, D.C. We’re going to talk to the president about whether that’s something that he wants so do,” U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told reporters following the talks.

Trump, speaking to reporters on Air Force One around the same time, said he would get a briefing Wednesday on the status of the negotiations.

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer speaks next to U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent during a press conference at government quarters Rosenbad after the trade talks between the U.S. and China concluded, in Stockholm, Sweden, July 29, 2025.

Magnus Lejhall/tt | Via Reuters

“I just had a phone call from Scott Bessent. They had a very good meeting with China, and it seems that they’re going to brief me tomorrow,” Trump said.

“We’ll either approve it or not. But he felt very good about the meeting, better than he felt that he felt yesterday,” he said.

Chinese trade negotiator Li Chenggang earlier said that the two sides agreed to continue to push for an extension of a 90-day pause on most of the U.S. “reciprocal” tariffs on Chinese goods, as well as most of Beijing’s retaliatory measures.

That pause is currently set to expire Aug. 12.

Bessent told reporters after Tuesday’s talks that if an extension is not reached by the deadline, then U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods will shoot back up to their April levels.

“We call it boomeranging,” Bessent said.

He said the trade teams will likely meet again in another 90 days.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

Trump on April 2 said he would impose a 34% blanket duty on Chinese goods as part of the sweeping global tariff rollout that he dubbed “liberation day.”

A week later, he said he would hike the China tariffs to 125% — and that came on top of 20% fentanyl-related tariffs that Trump had previously imposed. China retaliated with its own steep tariffs on U.S. goods.

Both sides agreed to pause most of the tariffs in May, after their first trade meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

Bessent gave a positive, but opaque, assessment of the latest talks. He said the two sides’ positions are getting more “refined” and suggested that their discussions have led to an increase in mutual respect and understanding.

But he said that the U.S. is not pleased with China continuing to buy oil from Iran – even though Trump gave Beijing his blessing to do so last month.

China's top trade negotiator says, U.S.-China pushing to extend tariff truce

Bessent also said that the negotiators did not discuss TikTok, the Chinese-owned social media app whose fate in the U.S. has been in flux since the enactment of a law that would ban it unless it is sold.

“We are very careful to keep trade and national security separate,” he said.

Trade talks between the U.S. and China, the world’s two largest trading nation’s, are proceeding on a separate track from the rest of Trump’s efforts to quickly reshape America’s global trade relationships.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” earlier Tuesday that Trump’s tariff rates for dozens of countries, which had been repeatedly paused, are set to restart Friday.

Bessent, asked by CNBC’s Javers about that looming tariff deadline, suggested that it should not be a major concern because the affected countries can continue to negotiate with the U.S.

“I would think that it’s not the end of the world if these snapback tariffs are on for anywhere from a few days to a few weeks, as long as the countries are moving forward and trying to negotiate in good faith,” he said.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

The global repercussions of China’s technological rise

The global repercussions of China’s technological rise

Cho Yoon-je The author is a special appointment professor at Yonsei University School of Economics.   Just a year or two ago, the dominant narrative in the West was “Peak China.” Many conservative scholars and commentators argued that China had reached the limits of its system and would never catch up to the United States,

S4Capital’s Monks Appoints Danny Lee as Managing Director for Greater China

SHANGHAI, July 31, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Monks, the global, purely digital, data-driven, unitary operating brand of S4Capital plc, is proud to announce the appointment of Danny Lee as Managing Director, Monks Greater China, effective immediately. Danny Lee Appointed Managing Director for Greater China at Monks (PRNewsfoto/Monks) In this role, Lee will work closely with Dixi Chern,

Speaker Johnson to ALL ISRAEL NEWS: Threat of war with China is real – ‘very dangerous time’ – we must be ‘prayerful’ as Trump tries ‘heroically’ to deescalate tensions over Taiwan & trade

Speaker Johnson to ALL ISRAEL NEWS: Threat of war with China is real – ‘very dangerous time’ – we must be ‘prayerful’ as Trump tries ‘heroically’ to deescalate tensions over Taiwan & trade

Joel C. Rosenberg with Speaker Mike Johnson (Photo: ALL ISRAEL NEWS) DENVER, COLORADO — Israel, Iran, and how he views increasingly hostile anti-Israel voices on the AmericaIn political Right were not the only issues that House Speaker Mike Johnson and I discussed in our recent sit-down interview in his gorgeous office on Capitol Hill. We

Trump tariff updates: Scramble for last-minute deals

Trump tariff updates: Scramble for last-minute deals

From successful Oval Office meeting to uncertain talks – here’s what’s happening with Canadapublished at 14:30 British Summer Time 14:30 BST Jessica MurphyBBC News, Toronto Canada’s prime minister won April’s general election by pitching himself as the leader who could take on the self-styled “Tariff Man” in the White House. In May, Mark Carney journeyed

BorgWarner Secures New Electric Cross Differential Project for Electric Vehicles in China

BorgWarner Expands EV Technology in China with Advanced Differential System

BorgWarner increases its electric vehicle business in China BorgWarner expands application of electric cross differential (eXD) to electric vehicles eXD technology enhances vehicle handling and traction capabilities AUBURN HILLS, Mich., July 31, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — BorgWarner has secured a new program for its electric cross differential (eXD) technology for a leading Chinese original equipment manufacturer (OEM) to

Bybit Launches Seamless Trading Across Stocks, Crypto and FX

US-China Tech Rivalry Deepens as Nvidia Called to Explain Chip Security Threats

TLDRs; China summons Nvidia over alleged backdoor risks in H20 AI chips amid growing tech tensions. Accusations reignite concerns over hardware vulnerabilities in critical AI infrastructure. US and China continue tit-for-tat tech probes, echoing the Huawei controversy. Smuggling of $1B worth of Nvidia AI chips into China adds fuel to security standoff. The Cyberspace Administration

How much cash is the US raising from tariffs?

How much cash is the US raising from tariffs?

Ben Chu, Daniel Wainwright & Phil Leake BBC Verify Getty Images Donald Trump has delivered a profound shock to the global trading system since returning to the White House. The US president announced on 2 April, so-called Liberation Day, a slew of swingeing so-called “reciprocal” tariffs, or import taxes, hitting dozens of countries around the