"A freeze on new tariffs and an agreement to hold further talks, if confirmed, would be a positive step," said Henry Levine, a senior advisor of Albright Stonebridge Group.
Vasileios Trigkas, a scholar and research fellow at the Belt and Road Strategy Institute of Tsinghua University, said not to impose new tariffs is "a ceasefire which buys time for technical negotiations."
Gordon Hinkle, vice president of Global Operations at the California Center, has been following the news from Buenos Aires. After hearing the meeting had achieved positive results, he said "it is extremely encouraging."
"The California Center as well as numerous other U.S. businesses are anxious to see a deal cut soon between China and the U.S., so we can get back to unhindered, non-tariff burdened business with our numerous overseas partners and clients," he added.
Bloomberg News reported that "investors have been eager for signs of a progress toward keeping an already costly trade dispute from spiraling into a new and broader cold war."
"Both sides avoided the worst-case scenario," Bloomberg said.
As the international community is concerned about the escalation of the trade frictions, Jin Jianmin, a senior fellow at the Fujitsu Research Institute in Tokyo, said the international community and the markets will definitely respond positively to the attitudes of the two sides in solving their disputes through cooperation and consultations.
【国内英语资讯:Roundup: Xi-Trump meeting puts China-U.S. ties back on right path, say experts】相关文章:
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