A Chinese diplomat price Washington's "goodwill" in trade conversations

The Chinese ambassador to Singapore said the United States is conducting trade negotiations with Beijing with ‘Goodwill’, at a time when President Donald Trump studies or the customs wandy will extend between the two largest economies in the world until the deadline is set on August 12. “The United States has expressed a great deal of trend in the next three months.” The Chinese ambassador made positive statements about a day after US and Chinese officials concluded the third round of commercial talks in Stockholm in less than three months. Trump is expected to receive a Treasury Secretary Secretary, Scott Besent, Wednesday, before making his final decision on the ceasefire expansion. The conclusion of the third round of the talks in Stockholm, Chinese officials concluded the meeting by expressing their conviction that the ceasefire will be expanded, while Pesent later emphasized that the final decision is in the hands of President Trump alone, and it is not within the jurisdiction of the US commercial representative, Jameson Ghrir. The countries of the world await the date of August 1 and away from China. Most countries await the deadline that Trump set on August 1 to negotiate the ‘mutual fees’ announced in early April. Some countries or blocks, such as the European Union and Japan, have reached at least partial agreements to determine customs duties. But many other countries, from India to a number of countries in Southeast Asia, still want to enter into agreements. Improving the monitoring of the movement of funds between Singapore and China has Singapore, which is the slope of Chinese origin, most of the population and is a prominent financial center, with traditional friendly relations with both Beijing and Washington. However, the increasing number of expatriates of the continental China, whether from the working class or the rich, resulted in the censorship of the movement of funds between the two countries. Chinese police have frozen hundreds of financial transfers sent by Chinese citizens in Singapore. This procedure came in the wake of an unprecedented issue of money laundering in which people were born in China. Ambassador Deso explained that the freezing of financial transfers is caused by using illegal agencies, and that the freezing point was subsequently removed from the majority of transfers.