The Borneo Post

Surprises lurk in Trump’s China tariff list, from thermostat­s to vaping devices

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports mostly shield consumers by targeting supply-chain components – but lurking inside the tariff lists are some surprises, from Google Nest thermostat­s to vaping devices to equipment used by aspiring rock stars.

In an escalating tit- fot- tat trade war, the United States has threatened to impose duties on up to US$450 billion of Chinese imports, with the first US$ 34 billion portion set to go into effect next month.

The first round of tariffs seeks to avoid consumer end products, suggesting a carefully crafted strategy to avoid a direct tax on voters.

But some consumer items will be affected, a Reuters analysis showed. And should the Trump administra­tion escalate tariffs to the full US$ 450 billion as threatened, it would have to put tariffs on just about everything. The United States imported US$506 billion in Chinese goods last year.

“By the time you get to US$200 billion, you’re going to start to affect products consumed by every member of the family,” said Hun Quach, vice president of internatio­nal trade for the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n.

According to a Reuters analysis of the 1,102 products targeted by the United States Trade Representa­tive office, initially just 1 per cent that will have a 25 per cent tariff slapped on them in stages from July 6 are “consumer goods.”

Under the categories developed by the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD), the most comprehens­ive database for determinin­g the uses of goods traded between two countries, most of the targeted products are classified as either “capital goods” or “intermedia­te items.”

The idea is to force companies to shift their supply chains away from China or boost efficienci­es to make up any cost difference­s. But ultimately, that would still hurt US consumers, industry leaders say.

“From our perspectiv­e, it kind of doesn’t matter where in the supply chain you impose the tariff, because it’s ultimately going to be a tax on Americans,” said Josh Kallmer, senior vice president for global policy at the Informatio­n Technology Industries Council, which

From our perspectiv­e, it kind of doesn’t matter where in the supply chain you impose the tariff, because it’s ultimately going to be a tax on Americans. Josh Kallmer, senior vice president for global policy at the Informatio­n Technology Industries Council

represents major tech firms.

The industry classifica­tions throw up some perhaps unexpected groupings, indicating what economists say is the arbitrary impact of tariffs.

For instance, the Nest thermostat, assembled in China and sold in the United States by Alphabet Inc’s Google for around US$250, is classified in the “capital goods category” of imports and will be subject to the tariffs.

Imports of Chinese- made vaping devices to the tune of US$ 300 million a year will be hit, as will US$ 16 million of electronic­s effects units, used by rock bands to distort guitar sounds.

Under the OECD product categories, both of these fall into a US$1.1 billion US category of miscellane­ous electrical equipment proposed for a second, US$16 billion round of tariffs.

The Buick Envision, a midsized sport-utility vehicle from General Motors Co’s stable, is also on the list. Built in China, it sold 41,000 units in the United States last year.

Chinese-made cars from Volvo, owned by China’s Geely, also face US tariffs, though Volvo recently launched its own US production at a plant in South Carolina.

Cellphones have so far been excluded, the USTR said last week. That would mean Apple’s Chinese-assembled iPhone would not be impacted. Some 61 million were imported last year, data from researcher­s Counterpoi­nt and IHS Markit shows. Not all Chinese firms

Most of the companies that will suffer from the first rounds of tariffs are not actually Chinese firms, according to research from Syracuse University economics professor Mary Lovely.

Using Chinese export data, she and researcher Yang Liang found that 87 percent of electronic­s related products targeted were from non-Chinese multinatio­nals and foreign-invested joint ventures.

Chinese semiconduc­tor products, for example, largely use chips from the United States, Taiwan, South Korea, or Japan. Low-level assembly, packaging and testing work is done in China. “People who say we can hurt China more because we buy more from them don’t really understand how the trade flows work,” said Lovely.

The flows from China to the United States include oxides of lanthanum, a rare earth metal where imports only come from China, used in Toyota Prius car batteries and catalytic hydrocrack­ing of petroleum.

China also has a 99 per cent share of US imports of several categories of LED lamps, totaling more than US$ 1.1 billion last year. In ceiling light fixtures, classified as intermedia­te goods but often sold to consumers, China supplied 91 per cent of all imports, at US$697 million last year.

 ??  ?? Should the Trump administra­tion escalate tariffs to the full US$450 billion as threatened, it would have to put tariffs on just about everything.
Should the Trump administra­tion escalate tariffs to the full US$450 billion as threatened, it would have to put tariffs on just about everything.

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