Chinese companies are willing to import more U.S. farm goods, the Ministry of Commerce said Thursday, as envoys prepared to meet in Shanghai next week for talks aimed at ending a tariff war.
The announcement appeared to be aimed at defusing President Donald Trump's criticism that Beijing was backsliding on a promise to narrow its trade surplus with the United States by purchasing more American farm products.
A ministry spokesman, Gao Feng, confirmed that trade envoys Tuesday will hold their first face-to-face talks on Tuesday since Trump and President Xi Jinping agreed in June to resume negotiations on the conflict that has battered exporters and rattled financial markets.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said earlier in Washington that he and Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer would meet Chinese officials.
Gao said Chinese importers will negotiate with U.S. suppliers of farm goods, though he said there was "no direct relationship" with next week's talks.
"Chinese companies have the willingness to continue importing some agricultural products from the United States," Gao said at a news conference. "They have already inquired and will negotiate contracts with US suppliers."
Trump recently accused Beijing of backsliding, saying on Twitter that "China is letting us down."
Asked whether Washington must lift curbs on technology sales to Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei for talks to make progress, Gao said Beijing wants the United States to "stop using erroneous government measures to suppress Chinese enterprises."