President Donald Trump of United States said he is working with Chinese President Xi
Jinping to find a way for ZTE to “get back into business fast”
and ordered the Department of Commerce to find a solution, following
sanctions banning the vendor from importing US components.
According
to a release by Mobile World Live, Trump wrote on Twitter on
Sunday (13 May): “Too many jobs in China lost. Commerce Department
has been instructed to get it done!”
The
job-saving concession comes ahead of planned high-level trade talks
this week and could ease tensions between the two countries following
the US planning billions of dollars in tariffs on a range of products
from China.
Earlier
this month, China appealed to the US government for an
amendment to the block during trade talks.
White
House representative Lindsay Walters said the president expects
commerce secretary Wilbur Ross “to exercise his independent
judgment, consistent with applicable laws and regulations, to resolve
the regulatory action involving ZTE based on its
facts”, Reuters reported.
ZTE,
with about 75,000 employees, last week announced it shut down
its major operating activities following the implementation of the
seven-year ban in April on US companies shipping components and
software to the vendor.
In
its announcement, ZTE said it was working to find a resolution to the
ban, which was imposed after the Department of Commerce ruled it made
false statements during an investigation into violations of trade
sanctions with Iran.
Australia-based
operator Telstra last week pulled 19 ZTE smartphones
and
three other devices from its shelves as a result of the US decision.
Trump’s
pitch that the move is designed to preserve Chinese jobs may not be
entirely altruistic: US jobs are also on the line if the ban is
enforced given major US companies including Qualcomm and Google are
key suppliers to ZTE.
In
a separate article, Reuters reported
a high-level ZTE representative said the company spent $2.3 billion
on exported US kit from 211 suppliers in 2017. Of those, the vendor
paid Qualcomm, Texas Instruments and Intel more than $100 million
apiece, the news agency stated.
Qualcomm
warned of a likely impact on future earnings from the block in
its recent fiscal Q2 2018 earnings announcement.
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