Millennium Post

CHINA SLAPS ADDITIONAL TARIFFS on $50 bn worth of US goods

Moves comes in retaliatio­n of US slapping 25 per cent tariff on Chinese goods

- K J M VERMA

BEIJING: In a tit-for-tat action, China on Saturday imposed additional duties on USD 50 billion worth of American products, a day after US President Donald Trump slapped a stiff 25 per cent tariff on Chinese goods worth similar amount, triggering a fullfledge­d trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

Trump on Friday accused China of intellectu­al property theft and unfair trade practices as he announced 25 per cent tariff on USD 50 billion worth of Chinese goods.

The Chinese government has decided to impose additional duties of 25 per cent on 659 items of US products worth about USD 50 billion, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

The government also unveiled a list of US products which will be subjected to additional tariffs, it said.

Additional tariffs for 545 items worth about USD 34 billion including agricultur­al products, vehicles and aquatic products will be effective from July 6, 2018, a statement issued by China’s Customs Tariffs commission said.

The implementa­tion date for imposing additional tariffs on the remaining 114 items, covering chemical products, medical equipment and energy products will be announced later, it said.

The decision has been made in line with relevant stipulatio­ns of the Foreign Trade Law of China and the Regulation­s of the People’s Republic of China on Import and Export Duties, as well as the fundamenta­l principles of internatio­nal laws, the statement said.

On Friday, the US announced additional tariffs of 25 per cent on Chinese imports worth approximat­ely USD 50 billion.

From July 6, additional tariffs will be levied on some USD 34 billion worth of Chinese products. Meanwhile, the other USD 16 billion worth of Chinese products will undergo further review in a public notice and comment process.

“The US move violates the relevant rules of the World Trade Organizati­on, goes against the consensus already reached in bilateral economic and trade consultati­ons, seriously infringes upon the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese side and undermines the interests of China and its people,” the commission’s statement said.

“The Chinese side firmly opposes that,” it said.

An official in charge of the Office of the Customs Tariff Commission said that the additional tariffs targeting Chinese goods, once imposed, would “substantia­lly change” the trade conditions of these goods, and affect relevant producers and trade companies as well as the production and operation of the upstream and downstream industries.

The official said the Chinese action was taken in response to the emergent circumstan­ces caused by the US violations of internatio­nal obligation­s.

China has noticed the US statement which said Washington would continue to impose additional tariffs if China takes retaliator­y measures. China reserves its rights to take correspond­ing measures, the unnamed official was quoted as saying in the report.

The moves to import tariffs came as the two countries held several rounds of talks following Trump’s demand to slash bilateral trade deficit by USD 100 billion in a month followed by USD 200 billion to address the USD 375 billion deficit.

In mid-may, both sides announced a cease-fire after two rounds of trade negotiatio­ns. The two sides had said in a joint statement that China would “significan­tly increase” purchases of US agricultur­al and energy products to reduce the trade imbalance, a top Trump demand.

Ten days later, the White House abruptly said it would proceed with the tariffs. A further round of trade talks in Beijing earlier this month failed to yield any breakthrou­ghs.

Trump’s decision to impose fresh tariffs on China follows his recent imposition of steep tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and the European Union on national security grounds.

 ??  ?? The move comes after hours after US President Donald Trump accused China of intellectu­al property theft and unfair trade practices
The move comes after hours after US President Donald Trump accused China of intellectu­al property theft and unfair trade practices
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