TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan's premier on Friday hailed a new trade deal with the United States as the ''best tariff deal'' enjoyed by countries with trade surpluses with Washington, as meanwhile a Chinese official in Beijing condemned the accord.
The agreement cuts U.S. tariffs on Taiwanese goods to 15% in exchange for $250 billion in new investments in the U.S. tech industry. It is comparable to deals with the European Union and Japan worked out after President Donald Trump proposed sweeping tariffs for many U.S. trading partners.
''For the time being, we obtained the best tariff deal enjoyed by the countries with trade surplus with the U.S.," said Taiwan Premier Cho Jung-tai. "This also shows that the U.S. sees Taiwan as an important strategic partner.''
''Our goal is to lower mutual tariffs'' Cho said. ''Therefore, according to the results of the negotiations, Taiwan has successfully obtained 15% in tariffs with no added fees. This is the same tariff imposed on Japan, Korea and the European Union.''
Trump initially had set the tariff at 32% on Taiwanese goods but later changed it to 20%.
China claims independently governed Taiwan as its territory, and in Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokesperson slammed the agreement when asked at a routine news briefing.
''China always firmly opposes countries having diplomatic relations with China and China's Taiwan region signing any agreement that carries sovereign connotations and an official nature with China's Taiwan region,'' said Guo Jiakun.
The U.S. Department of Commerce said the deal with Taiwan would establish an economic partnership to create several world-class U.S.-based industrial parks to help increase domestic manufacturing. It's ''a historic trade deal that will drive a massive reshoring of America's semiconductor sector,'' the department said in a statement.