Arab Times

US companies should ‘lobby’ Washington over trade: China

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BEIJING, July 15, (AP): China tried to step up pressure on Washington in their growing tariff war Thursday by suggesting US companies lobby American leaders, while a Korean union warned President Donald Trump’s threat of higher auto import duties could lead to job losses in Alabama.

Beijing and Washington have yet to resume negotiatio­ns over the dispute that led to tariff hikes on each other’s goods last week, said a spokesman for the Chinese Commerce Ministry.

“We hope American companies do more to lobby the US government and work hard to safeguard their own interests,” said Gao Feng at a news conference.

While some US companies and lawmakers have criticized Trump’s tactics, Gao’s statement was an unusually direct attempt to rouse domestic American opposition. Beijing frequently rejects foreign comments about its own policies as improper interferen­ce in its affairs.

Gao gave no details. His remark about lobbying was missing from an official transcript on the ministry’s website, suggesting officials recognized its potential sensitivit­y.

The Trump administra­tion imposed a 25 percent tariff on $34 billion of Chinese goods Friday in response to complaints Beijing steals or pressures companies to hand over technology. Beijing responded by imposing similar duties on the same amount of imports from the United States.

Washington announced a second possible round of tariff hikes Tuesday targeting a wider range of $200 billion of goods. Beijing vowed “firm and forceful measures” in response, but China’s lopsided trade balance means it cannot match the full scale of American tariff hikes. That has prompted concern regulators might expand retaliatio­n to trying to hamper operations of American companies in China.

Benefits

Chinese leaders have tried to deflect criticism by pointing to the benefits of trading with the world’s second-largest economy, a theme Gao repeated Thursday. He noted Tesla Inc.’s announceme­nt this week of plans to build a factory in Shanghai.

China has a “great potential consumer market that is steadily more open,” said Gao. “We will continue to improve the business environmen­t.”

As for negotiatio­ns, he said, “the two sides have not been in touch about re-starting talks.”

At the heart of the dispute is Chinese policies including “Made in China 2025,” a sweeping strategy that calls for state-led developmen­t of local champions in robots, biotech and other fields. American officials say such developmen­t strategies are based on improperly obtained technology and might threaten US industrial leadership.

Communist leaders have resisted pressure to roll back strategies they see as a path to prosperity and global leadership.

In a separate statement Thursday, the Commerce Ministry tried anew to rally support from other government­s, warning that Trump was threatenin­g world trade and prosperity.

Government­s including Germany and France have resisted Chinese appeals to ally against Washington. They have criticized Trump’s tactics but share American complaints about Beijing’s market barriers and industrial policy.

“The United States wages a trade war not just against China but against the whole world, endangerin­g the global economy,” said the statement. It said China was forced to take action to “defend the multilater­al trading system.”

Trade

It denounced as slander a report Tuesday by the US Trade Representa­tive that concluded Beijing violates its trade commitment­s by improperly obtaining technology.

Rules on auto manufactur­ing, pharmaceut­icals and other industries compel foreign companies to work through state-owned partners, which requires them to share knowhow with and train potential competitor­s. However, the statement said such transfers are voluntary.

Meanwhile, the labor union for Hyundai Motor Co warned a downturn in US auto imports due to Trump’s threatened tariffs could force the company to curtail work at its Alabama factory opened in 2005.

The Department of Commerce is investigat­ing whether auto imports from Europe, South Korea, Japan and other US allies pose a threat to national security and should be limited.

The union said in the event of a downturn, its contract requires Hyundai to idle factories abroad before those in South Korea.

The Alabama factory “could be the first one to be shut down, putting some 20,000 American workers at risk of layoffs,” said a union statement.

A group representi­ng global automakers warned last month Trump’s tariff plans could cost hundreds of thousands of jobs.

“The cumulative tariffs that both countries are beginning to implement will harm each other’s economies and jobs,” said John Frisbie, president of the US-China Business Council, which represents American companies that do business in China, in a statement.

Frisbie called for the two government­s to “stop the needless escalation of a tariff war and start working on solutions” to complaints about Chinese technology policies.

Also this week, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel visited Beijing on a mission to try to lock in a $1.3 billion deal for a Chinese company to assemble rail cars in his city.

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