Waterloo Region Record

China scrambles to cope with U.S. tariffs

Analysts: blow from Friday’s tariff hikes should be limited

- JOE MCDONALD AP researcher Yu Bing contribute­d.

BEIJING — Chinese exporters were scrambling Monday to cope with a plunge in U.S. sales while China’s state press shrugged off the impact of Washington’s tariff hikes in a spiralling technology dispute.

The overall blow from Friday’s tariff hikes to the world’s secondlarg­est economy should be limited, according to private sector analysts.

But President Donald Trump’s measures targeting Chinese medical, constructi­on and factory equipment hit exporters that say price-conscious American customers have stopped buying.

The general manager of a medical device exporter that makes 15 to 20 per cent of its sales to the United States said he plans to fly there this week to negotiate with customers who stopped ordering its syringes and other equipment.

Wuxi Yushou Medical Devices Co., Ltd., with a workforce of 500, stands to lose 30 to 40 million yuan (US$4.5 to $6 million) in annual revenue, according to the manager, Miao Liping.

Without new orders, “I will suspend making the products,” said Miao. “It is not easy for us to compete with low-end products in other countries.”

Other exporters of goods, from kitchen appliances and lighting to toys and tools, have reported similar drops in U.S. orders.

The state press tried to downplay the impact on China, emphasizin­g what Beijing says will be the bigger blow to American consumers who will pay more for Chinese goods.

China can find other suppliers for soybeans and other American goods hit by its own retaliator­y tariffs, state media said.

“Added tariffs basically have no effect on companies,” Ning Gaoning, the chair of one of China’s biggest chemical companies, state-owned Sinochem Group, told the website aweb.com.

Despite official bravado, the conflict adds to mounting economic challenges for Beijing.

Growth already was cooling after regulators tightened controls last year on bank lending to cool surging debt. That spooked investors, who have driven the main stock market index down 21 per cent from its Jan. 24 peak.

Trump raised tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese goods in response to complaints Beijing steals or pressures foreign companies to hand over technology.

More broadly, American officials worry Chinese government plans such as “Made in China 2025,” which calls for creating competitor­s in robots, biotech, artificial intelligen­ce and other fields, might erode U.S. technology leadership and prosperity.

Beijing retaliated for the U.S. move by hiking tariffs on American goods including soybeans, whiskey and electric cars.

Regulators appeared to be trying to minimize the cost to China by picking goods available from Brazil, Russia, Southeast Asia or other suppliers.

“It won’t be difficult for Chinese companies to find replacemen­ts for U.S. goods,” said Bai Ming, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, quoted by the newspaper Global Times.

Alternativ­e suppliers such as Europe, Australia and Brazil “will be likely winners,” Rajiv Biswas of IHS Markit said in a report.

The United States buys about 20 per cent of China’s exports, but trade has shrunk as a share of the Chinese economy.

Still, the impact could spread as Chinese factory demand for components from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Southeast Asia slumps.

That could cut next year’s Asia-Pacific economic growth by up to one percentage point, according to Biswas.

Meanwhile, China’s entirely state-controlled media have been ordered to avoid “aggressive language” in describing Trump, the South China Morning Post newspaper in Hong Kong reported, citing unidentifi­ed sources.

It said that might be intended to avoid antagonizi­ng the American leader and hindering negotiatio­ns.

Other exporters including makers of solar panels already were stepping up marketing in Asian and other markets. They are trying to make up for the loss of U.S. and European sales following higher tariffs imposed over complaints they sell at improperly low prices.

Solar exporter Jiangsu Akcome Science & Technology Co. makes about 15 per cent of its sales to the United States while Japan and South Korea are 25 to 30 per cent, its general manager, Hu Jingnang, told the newspaper Wuxi Daily.

 ?? ANDY WONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman pulling a two-wheel trolley loaded with goods touches a bull statue outside a mall in Beijing.
ANDY WONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman pulling a two-wheel trolley loaded with goods touches a bull statue outside a mall in Beijing.

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