Kuwait Times

Trump’s Mexico tax move raises eyebrows in Asia

Exports to US drive growth in most Asian countries

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Talk of a possible 20 percent tax on US imports from Mexico raised eyebrows Friday in Asia, where exports to the US drive growth in many economies. Reaction to the news was more muted than it might have been, however, since much of the region was closed for lunar new year holidays.

Japanese officials said Friday they hoped to meet soon with US officials. Finance Minister Taro Aso said the Japanese side should “thoroughly explain” how Japanese companies have been contributi­ng to American society, including creating jobs. “It would be important to exchange opinions to accurately convey the reality and establish a steady relationsh­ip,” Aso told reporters.

President Donald Trump’s press secretary Sean Spicer said the 20 percent tax was among several options to finance building a wall along the US southern border, but no decision has been made.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto (PAYN’yuh nee-EH’-toh) scrapped a scheduled trip to Washington next week over the issue. He has flatly rejected Trump’s assertion that Mexico will pay for the wall on its border.

The peso fell 0.6 percent against the US dollar, to 21.35 pesos to the dollar but recovered to about 21.23 late Friday in Asia. The Japanese yen also weakened against the dollar, to 115.23 yen from Thursday’s close of 114.46 yen.

China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported that Trump was considerin­g the 20 percent tariff without any editorial comment. However, the report cited unnamed analysts saying Trump would have to withdraw the US from the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, to be able to impose such a tax. Trump has said he wants to renegotiat­e NAFTA.

Though he did not refer directly to Trump, in remarks marking the eve of the lunar new year on Friday, Premier Li Keqiang said, “Above all, we remain convinced that economic openness serves everyone better, at home and abroad.

“The world is a community of shared destiny. It’s far preferable for countries to trade goods and services and bond through investment partnershi­ps than to trade barbs and build barriers. Should difference­s arise, it behooves us all to discuss them with respect and a keen sense of equality,” he said.

Uncertaint­y over future trade ties with the US rose after Trump pulled the US out of a Pacific Rim trade initiative, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, that formed the centerpiec­e of former President Barack Obama’s moves to strengthen US economic ties in the region.

It’s unclear how much of Trump’s campaign rhetoric will become reality, said Kent Calder, director of Asia Programs at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies.

“But the general symbolism that America is growing protection­ist I think deeply concerns almost all Asian countries because they are preeminent exporters, and many of them heavily dependent on exports and so that has major implicatio­ns for them, even if this is specifical­ly aimed first of all at Mexico,” he said. Japan’s chief government spokesman refused comment on tensions over the border wall, but said Tokyo was watching for any impact on Japanese companies.

A steep tariff on exports from Mexico to the US would pinch manufactur­ers like Toyota Motor Corp., which like nearly all other automakers builds small cars in Mexico to take advantage of its lower wages.

Toyota employs thousands of people at factories in the US, but it also is planning to build a plant in Mexico to make the popular Corolla subcompact. About 70 percent of the vehicles Japanese car makers sell in the US are made in the US, but a tax on cars exported from Japan - 1.8 million last year - would “clearly be a major headwind,” Capital Economics’ economists Marcel Thieliant and Mark Williams said in a report issued Friday.

Trump also has threatened to impose steep tariffs on imports from China, which ran a $319 billion surplus with the US in January-November 2016, compared with Japan’s $62.4 billion surplus and Mexico’s $60 billion, according to US figures. —AP

 ??  ?? MEXICO CITY: A front page newspaper headline reads “He did it!” over a picture of US President Donald Trump holding up signed documents, as he took action to jumpstart constructi­on on a promised border wall, in Mexico City. — AP
MEXICO CITY: A front page newspaper headline reads “He did it!” over a picture of US President Donald Trump holding up signed documents, as he took action to jumpstart constructi­on on a promised border wall, in Mexico City. — AP

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