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| The Trump administration is considering using a little-used provision of US trade law to compel China to crack down on its unfair trade practices.
The United States is planning to take trade measures against China to
force it to crack down on theft of intellectual property, the Wall Street
Journal reported late Tuesday.
President Donald Trump's administration plans to invoke a little used
clause in US trade law that allows America to probe whether China's
intellectual-property policies constitute unfair trade practices, the paper
said, and quoting people familiar with the matter.
The administration wants Beijing to impose stiffer penalties on theft of
intellectual property and ease obligations that US firms hoping to enter the
Chinese market share advanced technology, the Journal said.
It said it is not known how long the administration will study the issue
before making a decision.
The paper said officials at one point had hinted an announcement could
come this week.
Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping seemed to get off to a good
start when they met in Florida in April and agreed on a 100 day action plan.
This led to exports of US beef to China for the first time since 2003.
But in mid-July a day of trade talks led to nothing.
Trump on Saturday expressed frustration with
China's behaviour in the North Korea missile crisis, accusing it of not doing
enough and seeming to raise the idea of reprisal against Beijing.
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