Arab Times

Trump trade tariffs cost businesses $2.7 bln in Nov: group

Retaliator­y tariffs have severely impacted US exports

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WASHINGTON, Feb 14, (RTRS): US businesses paid an additional $2.7 billion in tariffs in November 2018, according to data from a coalition of US business groups fighting President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs.

The group, which brands itself “Tariffs Hurt the Heartland” and includes the Americans for Free Trade coalition and Farmers for Free Trade, crunches tariff payment data nationally and by state.

The data is part of a monthly series called the Tariff Tracker, which the group releases in a tie-up with The Trade Partnershi­p, a Washington­based internatio­nal trade and economic consulting firm. The monthly import data, it said, is calculated using numbers from the US Census Bureau, and the monthly export data is compiled using numbers from the Census Bureau and the US Department of Agricultur­e.

The November numbers are the latest government ones available due to the recent US government shutdown.

The group’s spokesman, former Republican congressma­n Charles Boustany, said the data shows Americans, not foreign competitor­s, are the big losers in the trade war.

“US businesses are being hit by a double whammy of historic tax increases in the form of tariffs and declining exports as farmers and manufactur­ers lose opportunit­ies in the overseas markets they rely on,” Boustany said.

The group also said retaliator­y tariffs have severely impacted US exports. In November, US exports of products subject to retaliator­y tariffs declined by $4.1 billion, or 37 percent, from the previous year, it said.

Hun Quach, vice-president of internatio­nal trade at the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, said raising tariffs on thousands of consumer products will cause massive disruption to retailers in an already uncertain environmen­t. US tariffs on $200 billion worth of imports from China are scheduled to rise to 25 percent from 10 percent if the two sides cannot reach a deal by a March 1 deadline. On Wednesday, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told reporters in Beijing that talks between the two sides were going well.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders told Fox News that Trump is weighing different possibilit­ies on how to treat the March 1 deadline to reach a trade deal with China, adding that the final agreement depends on Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping meeting in person.

The United States would escalate tariffs on Chinese goods if the deadline is missed, and likely prompt China to retaliate.

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