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Few U.S. firms see Trump's Phase 1 China trade deal as worth tariff costs, survey shows

FILE PHOTO: The flags of China, U.S. and the Chinese Communist Party are displayed in a flag stall at the Yiwu Wholesale Market in Yiwu

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Few U.S. companies doing business in China view President Donald Trump's Phase 1 trade deal as being worth the cost of tariffs incurred over a two-year trade war, a new survey by the U.S.-China Business Council showed on Tuesday.

The trade group said that just 7% of respondents to its annual membership survey said that the benefits from the Phase 1 agreement outweigh the costs of tariffs incurred along the way. Some 36% of respondents said the costs outweighed the benefits and 56% said it was too soon to tell.

But the USCBC said 88% of respondents held a "positive" or somewhat positive overall view of the trade deal. Half of those responding positively said this was because the deal "makes the bilateral relationship more stable and decreases chances for further tariff escalation."

The Phase 1 trade deal, activated on Feb. 15, calls for China to increase purchases of U.S. farm and manufactured products, energy and services by $200 billion over two years, along with increased U.S. access to China's financial services markets, and some improvements in intellectual property protections. Promised negotiations on a Phase 2 agreement covering more difficult technology transfer issues, industrial subsidies and data restrictions have been shelved.

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China is far behind the pace of purchases needed to meet its first-year purchase increase target of $77 billion.

Despite this shortfall and a rapidly deteriorating U.S.-China relationship amid issues from China's security crackdown on Hong Kong to Trump's threat to shut down Chinese-owned short video app TikTok, White House adviser Larry Kudlow said on Tuesday the Phase 1 trade deal is "fine right now."

Top U.S. and Chinese officials are due to hold a videoconference on Saturday to assess the six-month implementation of the Phase 1 agreement.

(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)