Will Chinese negotiators 'extract their pound of flesh'?

And more of the week's smartest perspectives on the trade war

President Trump and Xi Jinping.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

The smartest insight and analysis, from all perspectives, rounded up from around the web:

"The damage caused by President Trump's trade fight with China has spread further and faster than many expected," said Bloomberg News in an editorial. Factory orders are slumping on both sides. American farmers are feeling the pinch. Apple is suffering from China's slowing economy. As the sparring superpowers resume talks in Beijing this week, it's not the time for all-or-­nothing gamesmanship. Both sides "ought to see there's a deal to be had — and should help each other seize it, even if it's less than perfect." American negotiators, who are threatening to boost Chinese tariffs beginning in March, are right "to maintain a poker face." China has been promising bold reforms for years without following through, even as state control over the economy has increased under President Xi Jinping. But "it would be counterproductive for the U.S. to press for outright capitulation, or to spin any emerging compromise as a crushing Chinese defeat." The two countries' economic fortunes are bound together. "Both sides ought to grant each other a face-saving exit from the mess they've made."

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