Fukuoka: The United States is open to further negotiations with China on their ongoing trade battle but any potential deal will wait until the two leaders meet at the end of the month, Washington's top finance official said on Saturday.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank chiefs, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin warned that Washington would press on with tariffs if a deal could not be reached.
"We were on the way to a historic deal. If they want to come back to the table and complete the deal on the terms that we were continuing to negotiate, that will be great. If not, as the president said, we'll move on with tariffs," said Mnuchin.
President Donald Trump is expected to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Osaka on June 28-29 and any potential breakthrough would likely only come then, he predicted.
"I would expect that the main progress will be at the G20 leaders' meeting between the two presidents," he said.
Mnuchin said that although he would be holding one-on-one talks with Chinese central bank chief Yi Gang during the G20 finance meeting in the western Japanese city of Fukuoka, this would "not be a negotiating meeting".
"We've been hard at work on what could be a historic agreement for both countries, something that could be economically very important for us and China and for the rest of the world," he said.
However, he insisted that the current trade relationship between the world's top two economies was "very unbalanced." "Our markets are completely open to them. Their markets have not been open to us," he said.