China, Trump
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Trump, Cambodia and Thailand
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President Donald Trump says a trip to China may happen soon, hinting at efforts to stabilize U.S.-China trade relations.
Star founders, Beijing officials and deep-pocketed financiers converge on Shanghai by the thousands this weekend to attend China’s most important AI summit. At the top of the agenda: how to propel Beijing’s ambitions to leapfrog the US in artificial intelligence — and profit off that drive.
Yet analysts say the Chinese leader is likely holding out for concrete deliverables before agreeing to the high-profile meeting. Trump dramatically escalated the trade war with the world's second-largest economy in April, rolling out sweeping new tariffs that prompted China to respond with its own export duties and other measures.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he may visit China soon for a landmark trip to address simmering trade and security tensions between the superpower rivals.
1don MSN
China trade has reached a "good place" with reduced tariffs, but said China's 30% share of global manufacturing is unsustainably imbalanced.
2don MSN
The White House on Wednesday released its promised "AI Action Plan," a sweeping agenda aimed at promoting the United States' dominance in artificial intelligence.
That’s the case when gauging China’s evolving view of President Donald Trump’s second term. Beijing sees Trump’s disruptive actions — his gutting of institutions of U.S. soft power, his launching of trade wars against adversaries and allies alike,
2don MSN
Meta executive Joel Kaplan backs Trump’s AI plan, praising its focus on innovation, infrastructure, and leadership in 'fierce' race with China
President Donald Trump’s recent flurry of trade deals have given Asian exporters some clarity on tariffs, but missing are key details on how to avoid punitive rates that target China’s supply chains.
As the two biggest economic targets in Donald Trump’s trade war, some analysts thought the European Union and China could move closer together and stake out common ground.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar claimed that his country is “very close” to locking down a tariff deal with the US ahead of President Trump’s fast-approaching Aug. 1