101 - The U.S. Trade Representative

Jamieson Greer: Navigating US-China Trade, Enforcing Commitments, and Evolving Semiconductor Exports


Listen Later

Listeners, recent coverage of Jamieson Greer has focused on his role as a leading voice on United States trade strategy toward China, especially on agricultural sales and technology exports.

Transport Topics reports that Greer has been emphasizing strict monitoring of Chinese compliance with recent bilateral trade commitments, highlighting soybean purchases as a key benchmark. In a recent television appearance, he said China is roughly one third of the way toward meeting its current season soybean purchase commitment, and stressed that the United States is verifying each element of the deal through detailed tracking. According to that report, soybean prices have risen since the latest understanding with Beijing, but several parts of the agreement, including some export control issues, remain unfinished.

Greer has also been weighing in on advanced semiconductor exports to China. In that same interview, he argued that while companies want to maximize profits, policymakers must put national security first when deciding which high end computer chips can be sold abroad. He described the threshold for restricting chip sales as something that evolves over time, reflecting both technological change and security assessments.

RFD TV notes that Greer, in his capacity with the U S Trade Representative team, has signaled that any new trade arrangement under discussion with China may ultimately be narrower than earlier ambitions. Market analysts told the network that Greers mixed but cautious comments are adding uncertainty for grain and oilseed traders, who dislike not knowing how large Chinese demand will be.

According to RFD TV, Greer has also supported a formal review of Chinas performance under the earlier Phase One trade agreement, opening the door to potential investigations into whether Beijing met its import and reform pledges. Farm groups such as the American Farm Bureau Federation are pressing his office to hold China accountable for missed commitments while preserving access to that critical export market.

Together, these recent reports portray Jamieson Greer as tightening scrutiny on Chinese obligations, preparing for narrower but more enforceable deals, and warning that security concerns may further shape what American companies can sell to China in the months ahead.

Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

101 - The U.S. Trade RepresentativeBy Inception Point Ai