Manila Bulletin

Effects of US-China trade war felt most in Arkansas

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ARKADELPHI­A, Ark. (AP) — A Chinese company’s announceme­nt two years ago that it would spend more than $1 billion and hire hundreds of workers for a paper mill on the outskirts of this rural college town was seen as a much-needed shot in the arm for the region’s economy.

A web video promoting Arkadelphi­a — “It’s a great place to call home!” — continues to tout the Sun Paper project and its potential to generate jobs and boost developmen­t. But optimism has been giving way to concern in recent months amid President Donald Trump’s escalating trade dispute with China.

The threat of a full-blown trade war has delayed the project further and prompted the state’s governor to send his top economic developmen­t official to China to make sure it stays on track. It also has caused other Chinese companies considerin­g investing in Arkansas to put their plans on hold.

“It’s like a dark cloud hanging over the future of the project,” Stephen Bell, the president and chief executive officer of the Arkadelphi­a Area Chamber of Commerce. “Right now, the clouds are off on the horizon. But I think no one knows where the trade situation is going right now.”

The uncertaint­y in Arkansas, where voters overwhelmi­ngly supported Trump in the 2016 president election, highlights how US states are trying to ease the sting of the president’s threatened trade war by appealing directly to Chinese companies.

Those companies invested $29 billion in the US last year, virtually all of which was related to corporate mergers and acquisitio­ns, according to the research firm Rhodium Group. While that was down from a record $46 billion in 2016, those investment­s remain crucial for local economies.

Trump’s trade dispute has squeezed US states and communitie­s in at least two ways: It has slowed direct investment, as in Arkansas, and the retaliator­y tariffs imposed by other countries have made it harder for local farmers and manufactur­ers to sell abroad.

Political leaders from both parties have objected. Governors from Nevada, Colorado, Massachuse­tts and North Carolina, for example, protested tariffs on imported solar-energy components, saying it would cost tens of thousands of U.S. jobs. Trump went forward with those tariffs, anyway.

In Arkansas alone, retaliator­y tariffs from China, the European Union, Mexico and Canada threaten $339 million in exports, according to the US Chamber of Commerce.

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