The Jerusalem Post

Washington and Beijing kick off new round of tariffs in trade war

Trump: We won’t be servants to Chinese • Escalation comes despite signs talks could resume in Sept. • China targets crude with 5% tariff

- • By BEN BLANCHARD and SHIVANI SINGH

BEIJING (Reuters) – China and the United States began imposing additional tariffs on each other’s goods on Sunday, the latest escalation in a bruising trade war, despite signs that talks would resume some time this month.

Beijing’s levy of 5% on US crude marks the first time the fuel has been targeted since the world’s two largest economies started their trade war more than a year ago.

US President Donald Trump, writing on Twitter, said the fight was about reducing reliance on China and again urged US companies to find alternate suppliers outside China.

The Trump administra­tion will begin collecting 15% tariffs on more than $125 billion in Chinese imports, including smart speakers, Bluetooth headphones and many types of footwear.

In retaliatio­n, China started to impose additional tariffs on some of the US goods on a $75-billion target list. Beijing did not specify the value of the goods that face higher tariffs from Sunday.

The extra tariffs of 5% and 10% were levied on 1,717 items out of 5,078 total products originatin­g from the United States. Beijing will start collecting additional tariffs on the rest on December 15.

Trump on Sunday cited comments from US economist Peter Morici, who claims the tariffs will not impact US consumers that much given a drop in the Chinese currency, and called on US companies to find suppliers outside of China.

“We don’t want to be servants to the Chinese!” he said. “This is about American Freedom. Redirect the supply chain. There is no reason to buy everything from China!”

Chinese state media struck a defiant note.

“The United States should learn how to behave like a responsibl­e global power and stop acting as a ‘school bully’,” the official Xinhua news agency said.

“As the world’s only superpower, it needs to shoulder its due responsibi­lity and join other countries in making this world a better and more prosperous place. Only then can America become great again.”

Tariffs could not impede China’s developmen­t, said the official People’s Daily of the ruling Communist Party.

“China’s booming economy has made China a fertile ground for investment that foreign companies cannot ignore,” it said, in a commentary under the name ‘Zhong Sheng’, or ‘Voice of China’, which is often used to state its view on foreign policy issues.

Last month, US President Donald Trump said he was increasing existing and planned tariffs by 5% on about $550-billion worth of Chinese imports after Beijing announced its own retaliator­y tariffs on US goods.

Tariffs of 15% on cellphones, laptops, toys and clothing are to take effect on December 15.

The US Trade Representa­tive’s Office said on Thursday it would collect public comments through September 20 on a planned tariff increase to 30% on a $250-billion list of goods already hit with a 25% tariff.

Trade teams from China and the United States continue to talk and will meet in September, but tariff hikes on Chinese goods set to go in place on Sunday will not be delayed, Trump has said.

For two years, the Trump administra­tion has sought to pressure China to make sweeping changes to its policies on intellectu­al property protection, forced transfers of technology to Chinese firms, industrial subsidies and market access.

China has consistent­ly denied Washington’s accusation­s that it engages in unfair trade practices, vowing to fight back in kind and criticizin­g US measures as protection­ist.

China has pressed the United States to cancel the tariff increase, but said last week that a September round of talks was being discussed between the two.

The trade war further strains Beijing-Washington ties, already overshadow­ed by US freedom of navigation exercises near Chinese-occupied islands in the disputed South China Sea, and US support for self-ruled and democratic Taiwan, which China claims as its own.

 ?? (Jason Lee/Reuters) ?? A BOY does homework at a stall inside an electronic­s mall on Huaqiangbe­i Commercial Street, a marketplac­e for Chinese producers and internatio­nal wholesale buyers, in Shenzhen, last month.
(Jason Lee/Reuters) A BOY does homework at a stall inside an electronic­s mall on Huaqiangbe­i Commercial Street, a marketplac­e for Chinese producers and internatio­nal wholesale buyers, in Shenzhen, last month.

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