U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on April 28 said many top U.S. trading partners had made 'very good' proposals to avert U.S. tariffs, and one of the first deals to be signed would likely be with India.
"I would guess that India would be one of the first trade deals we would sign," Bessent told CNBC, adding that the U.S. had also held very substantial negotiations with Japan and discussions with other Asian trading partners were going well.
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"Vice President Vance was in India last week, talked about substantial progress. I have mentioned that the negotiations with the Republic of Korea have gone very well, and I think we've had some very substantial negotiations with our Japanese allies," Bessent told CNBC.
Speaking to reporters after two early morning television interviews, Besssent said the first such trade agreement might come this week or next.
He told CNBC that China's recent moves to exempt certain U.S. goods from its retaliatory tariffs showed that it wanted to de-escalate trade tensions with the United States, and said the U.S. had refrained from escalating by embargoing those goods.
Bessent told Fox News that President Donald Trump will be "intimately involved" in each of the bespoke trade deals with each of 15 to 18 important trading partners, but it will be important to reach agreements in principle soon.
Asked whether he planned to call his Chinese counterpart to jump-start negotiations between the world's two largest economies, Bessent told Fox News: We'll see what happens with China. It's important. I think it's unsustainable from the Chinese side. So maybe they'll call me one day."
He earlier told CNBC that "all aspects of government are in contact with China," and underscored that it was up to China to reduce tensions since they sold five times more goods to the U.S. than vice versa.
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