United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has made headlines over the past week for launching significant new trade investigations and confirming breakthrough agreements with several Asian countries. On October twenty-fourth, Greer initiated a Section three hundred one investigation into China’s compliance with its phase one trade agreement commitments. Signed in January two thousand twenty, that agreement included provisions for stronger intellectual property protection, greater import volumes from the United States, liberalization of China’s financial sector, and removal of forced technology transfer requirements. According to International Trade Insights, the latest probe will examine whether China has failed to meet its obligations, and U.S. officials are inviting businesses and other stakeholders to submit examples of China’s non-compliance for consideration. The comment period will open on October thirty-first and last through December first, with a public hearing scheduled for December sixteenth. Clark Hill explains that if China is found non-compliant, the U.S. could impose new tariffs or broaden other trade restrictions. The process is being closely watched since it could expand or alter tariffs already in place and further influence the overall U.S.-China trade relationship.
Meanwhile, Greer also secured major developments in Southeast Asia. On October twenty-seventh, he confirmed that the United States has signed new trade framework agreements with Cambodia and Malaysia, and progressed trade deals with Thailand and Vietnam. Details reported by Barnes Richardson and the North American Meat Institute highlight substantial tariff reductions and improved market access for U.S. goods, most notably meat and poultry exports. Cambodia and Malaysia have agreed to eliminate tariffs on all U.S. exports and allow American food and device safety regulations, while both countries committed to stronger labor rights enforcement.
At a separate meeting in Malaysia, Greer, alongside Chinese and U.S. Treasury officials, helped set the terms for what geopoliticalfutures dot com described as a basic consensus to address ongoing trade tensions. Both sides discussed U.S. tariffs on the Chinese maritime and shipbuilding sectors and signaled an intention to prevent the escalation of additional tariffs, marking what some sources say could be an extension of the U.S.-China trade truce. This moment is seen as crucial for both economies as current trade policy decisions may redefine supply chains across the globe.
Listeners, these recent moves showcase how Greer’s work aims to hold China to its promises while also cultivating new trade opportunities in Southeast Asia. The coming weeks will be pivotal as public input on the China investigation is gathered and the scope of any new U.S. actions is determined. Thank you for tuning in and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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