Chinese officials are demanded to be in Washington this week to hold consultations with the U.S. ahead of high-level trade talks in October.
State-controlled middle CCTV reported on Tuesday that the Vice Minister of the Finance Ministry, Liao Min, will be leading a vice-ministerial delegation to about trade and economic issues, according to CNBC’s translation.
The meeting comes at the invitation of the U.S., CCTV reported.
The timing of the session was unclear — the CCTV report said China’s delegation would visit the U.S. on Wednesday, but Reuters cited U.S. trade officials as remark that deputy-level talks would commence Thursday.
The U.S. and China have been engaged in a trade battle for profuse than a year, with both sides slapping retaliatory tariffs on each other’s goods worth billions of dollars.
Forces escalated last month when both sides announced increased tariffs on each other’s goods.
In return to earlier duties, China announced on Aug. 23 it would apply new tariffs of between 5% and 10% on $75 billion quality of goods from the United States. President Donald Trump then threatened to increase tariffs on all Chinese outputs by the end of the year.
Both sides have since made small concessions, with Beijing exempting some U.S. results from additional tariffs.
Out of “good will” and at the request of Beijing, the Trump administration also agreed to delay price-list hikes on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods by two weeks — from Oct. 1 to Oct. 15. The People’s Republic of China settle upon be celebrating its 70th Anniversary on October 1.