The Asian Age

Trump set to levy extra $ 200bn tariff on Chinese goods

China ready to impose retaliator­y tariffs on $ 60 billion worth of American items ■

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Washington, Sept. 6: The Trump administra­tion may be about to slap tariffs of up to 25 per cent on an additional $ 200 billion in Chinese goods, escalating a confrontat­ion between the world’s two biggest economies and likely squeezing US firms that import everything from handbags to bicycle tires.

The administra­tion could decide to begin taxing the imports — equal to nearly 40 per cent of all the goods China sold the US last year — after a public comment period ends Thursday.

China said it is ready to impose retaliator­y tariffs on $ 60 billion worth of US goods if that happens.

“China will have to take necessary countermea­sures if the US side ignores the opposition of the overwhelmi­ng majority of its enterprise­s and adopts new tariff measures,” commerce ministry spokesman Gao Feng said Thursday.

The US has already imposed tariffs on $ 50 billion on Chinese products, and Beijing has punched back with tariffs on $ 50 billion on American goods.

These US goods include soybeans and beef — a direct shot at supporters of President Donald Trump in the US farm belt.

Trump initiated the trade war to punish Beijing for what it says are China’s predatory tactics to try to supplant US technologi­cal supremacy.

Those tactics, the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive has alleged, include stealing trade secrets through computer hacking and forcing US companies to hand over technology in exchange for access to the Chinese market.

In the early rounds of the hostilitie­s, the administra­tion targeted Chinese industrial imports to try to spare American consumers from higher import costs. But if Trump adds the $ 200 billion in Chinese products to the target list, American consumers would likely feel the pinch directly. And China has vowed to hit $ 60 billion in US products in retaliatio­n.

Many American companies that rely on targeted Chinese imports are bracing for the next round of tariffs to hit, with some wondering whether they can absorb the higher costs or instead will need to pass them along to their customers — or find alternativ­es suppliers outside China.

“An escalation of the tariff war could start to sever or disrupt supply chains, bringing about diminished production efficiency, higher costs and lost competitiv­eness - ultimately leading to a lower potential growth rate for both countries,” analysts at S& P Global Ratings wrote Wednesday.

They say a full- blown trade war by 2021 could shrink America’s annual economic output by an average of one- third of a percentage point and China’s by two- tenths of a percentage point from 2019 through 2021.

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