Business World

Trump’s China tariffs risk costing US jobs — new study shows

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump says his trade actions may cause “a little pain” in the short term, and a new study shows US agricultur­al workers could be hurt the most.

The tariffs on $ 50 billion in Chinese imports that Trump has proposed, plus promised retaliator­y duties by China, would reduce US gross domestic product by $2.9 billion and cost almost 134,000 US jobs, according to a study commission­ed by the Consumer Technology Associatio­n and the National Retail Federation, which oppose the tariffs. That includes more than 67,000 jobs in agricultur­e.

States that Trump won in 2016 would lose about 77,500 positions, the study found.

As Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and other administra­tion officials head to China this week for trade talks, the study shows the estimated impact on the American economy if the tariffs are imposed and a trade war ensues, the groups said.

“We must resolve this dispute without resorting to job-killing tariffs and retaliatio­n,” National Retail Federation President and Chief Executive Officer Matthew Shay said in a statement.

The Trump administra­tion has targeted more than 1,300 Chinese products, from television­s and backhoes to ingredient­s for insulin, for tariffs of 25% in response to complaints about China’s theft of intellectu­al property.

THREATS

That prompted China to promise retaliator­y duties on soybeans, aircraft and other products. Trump then ordered considerat­ion of an additional $100 billion in tariffs that the administra­tion hasn’t yet identified.

The study, completed by the Washington- based consulting firm Trade Partnershi­p Worldwide LLC, estimated the effect on employment under different scenarios. The most probable scenario has the US imposing $50-billion tariffs with promised Chinese retaliatio­n, according to the study.

Under that scenario, some sectors, including machinery and electronic­s manufactur­ing, would add jobs as reduced imports bolster US production, the study found. But for every job gained, more than four would be lost during the first years after tariffs were imposed as higher prices reduce consumer spending and farmers in particular are hammered by Chinese duties, the study said.

“Rising costs on farmers, manufactur­ers and service providers isn’t the answer,” Gary Shapiro, chief executive and president of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, said in a statement. “It shows protection­ism will weaken America.”

Ross and other administra­tion officials have downplayed the effect of the tariffs on the US economy. Trump has acknowledg­ed that American markets and farmers could face “a little pain” but that the country would be better off in the long term.

“Short term, you may have to take some problems,” Trump said during an April 28 rally in Michigan’s Washington Township. “Long term, you’re going to be so happy.”

That White House has to prove that assumption, said David French, senior vice-president of government relations at the National Retail Federation.

“Our view is that tariffs and trade wars are a measurable loser for the US economy,” French said.

The Retail Federation, Consumer Technology Associatio­n and other trade groups have been working together and separately to lobby the administra­tion to strike a deal with China that avoids tariffs, and otherwise to exclude specific products from the list. Companies are making requests to have products removed or added, with a public hearing set for May 15 in Washington.

“The best thing we can all do is just try every avenue and eventually, something hopefully will stick,” said Sage Chandler, vice-president for internatio­nal trade at the Consumer Technology Associatio­n.

While it’s a good sign the US is talking with China and it’s appropriat­e to address concerns about China’s trade practices, the administra­tion’s proposed approach is not the answer, French said.

“It’s the methods, it’s the tactics, it’s the uncertaint­y, it’s the impact on our supply chains that we’re trying to communicat­e, and I’m just not convinced they’re listening at this point,” he said. — Bloomberg

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