The Sun (Malaysia)

US business group slams Trump on tariffs

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WASHINGTON: The US Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s largest business group and customaril­y a close ally of President Donald Trump’s Republican Party, is launching a campaign to oppose Trump’s trade tariff policies.

With some of America’s tightest trading partners imposing retaliator­y measures, Trump’s approach to tariffs has unsettled financial markets and strained relations between the White House and the Chamber.

The new campaign, detailed first to Reuters, is an aggressive effort by the business lobbying giant. Using a stateby-state analysis, it argues that Trump is risking a global trade war that will hit the wallets of US consumers.

“The administra­tion is threatenin­g to undermine the economic progress it worked so hard to achieve,” said Chamber president Tom Donohue in a statement to Reuters. “We should seek free and fair trade, but this is just not the way to do it.”

The Chamber, which has 3 million members, historical­ly has worked closely with Republican presidents and praised Trump for signing business tax cuts in December. But mounting trade tensions have opened a rift with the president.

Trump has implemente­d billions of dollars in tariffs targeted at China, Canada, Mexico and the European Union, saying such moves are needed to offset trade imbalances.

Nations have begun retaliatin­g. On Friday, Canada struck back at US steel and aluminium tariffs, vowing to impose punitive measures on US$12.6 billion (RM50.9 billion) worth of US goods until Washington relents.

China is expected to impose a new 25% tax on soybeans this month. Mexico is adding duties to pork imports. The EU has targeted US$3.2 billion in American goods exported to the 28member bloc, including bourbon and Harley Davidson motorcycle­s.

Pushing back on Trump, the Chamber based a state-by-state analysis on data from the U.S. Department of Commerce and government agencies in China, the EU, Mexico, and Canada.

Trump has previously been persuaded to back off of trade threats with the argument that states that backed him in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign will be hard-hit.

For example, the Chamber said Texas could see US$3.9 billion worth of exports targeted by retaliator­y tariffs; Tennessee, US$1.4 billion; and South Carolina, US$3 billion. – Reuters

 ?? REUTERSPIX ?? Stored rolls of steel outside the ArcelorMit­tal Dofasco plant, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. On Friday, Canada struck back at US steel and aluminium tariffs.
REUTERSPIX Stored rolls of steel outside the ArcelorMit­tal Dofasco plant, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. On Friday, Canada struck back at US steel and aluminium tariffs.

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