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USTR holds productive commercial meeting with Vietnam

USTR holds productive commercial meeting with Vietnam

In a Thursday statement, the U.S. Trade Rep Jamieson Greer said that he and his Vietnamese counterpart had a productive meeting in which they both agreed to make rapid progress in reciprocal trade.

Greer and Vietnam’s Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Han Dien spoke Wednesday and "instructed [their] teams to engage in technical discussion in the coming days in order to discuss efforts on expanding market access and addressing unfair trade practices," according to the statement.

The statement stated that "Both sides agreed it is important to make rapid progress toward reciprocal and equal trade between the United States of America and Vietnam."

Vietnam had the fourth largest trade surplus of all U.S. trading partner countries, valued at $123.5 billion in last year.

The U.S. has imposed a 46% tariff on it as part of the reciprocal measures announced early in this month by President Donald Trump.

The U.S. has suspended the imposition of tariffs until July in order to facilitate negotiations. However, a 10% flat rate still applies. A tariff of 46% could seriously undermine the growth of Vietnam, which is heavily dependent on its main market, the United States and large investments from foreign manufacturers.

Vietnam is a major industrial hub in Southeast Asia and a key security partner of the United States as it faces China's rising power.

Pham Minh Chinh, the Prime Minister of Vietnam, instructed his officials on Tuesday to combat fraud in trade and counterfeiting as well as other issues that concern the United States. He also stated that Vietnam would buy more American products, including defense and safety products, as well as seek quicker deliveries of the commercial planes Vietnamese Airlines have ordered from America.

Vietnam, under pressure from the United States, is tightening its controls on certain trade with China. This is to ensure that goods exported to the United States bearing the "Made in Vietnam label" have enough added value in Vietnam to justify this.

Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, visited Hanoi in Hanoi and called for closer ties between Vietnam and China on trade and supply chain. (Reporting and editing by Katharine Wallis and Daniel Wallis; Doina Chiacu, David Brunnstrom)

(source: Reuters)