"The US business community is pleased that the two governments have agreed to begin doing the hard work of resolving the substantive issues that American companies have faced in China, and to postpone the imminent tariff increases that had been on the horizon. This outcome delays further escalation and gets both sides back on track to find a sustainable long-term solution to the challenges in the relationship," Jacob Parker told Sputnik.
READ MORE: Russia, US, China, France Hold Secret Talks on Cybersecurity in Paris — Reports
Meanwhile, hard work to resolve the trade conflict only begins, he noted.
"It is unreasonable to assume that all challenges in the relationship can be resolved in 90 days. Both sides should instead aim for substantive, measurable and commercially meaningful outcomes and a long-term engagement framework," the official said.
The coming 90 days will at least allow to set targets for further talks, Parker concluded.
READ MORE: China Has Competitive Advantages Over US in Struggle For India — Scholar
The two nations have been locked in the trade war since March when Trump imposed tariffs on metal imports from several countries, including US longtime allies.
Tensions rose in May when the US administration said it would levy extra taxes on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods, bringing that figure up to $250 billion over the next few months. China retaliated with tariffs on $110 billion of US imports.