Cape Times

US-China tariffs war hits SA hard

7 000 jobs are on the line

- Luyolo Mkentane

CHINESE President Xi Jinping yesterday called on the developing world to rise against US protection­ism, warning that the tariffs the world’s biggest economy had imposed on imports would have far-reaching implicatio­ns for emerging nations and markets.

He told the 10th BRICS Summit in Johannesbu­rg yesterday that the US stance had dealt a severe blow to multinatio­nal trading.

Xi said the developing world needed to take a united stance in rejecting the US president’s tariffs as no country would benefit from the measures.

“Today, we are witnessing major changes unfolding in our world, something unseen in a century,” said Xi.

Last month, the US and China embarked on a full-blown trade war with the Trump administra­tion slapping tariffs on $500 billion (R6.5trln) in Chinese imports, forcing Beijing to implement retaliator­y measures on US imports.

The stand-off has seen investors offloading emerging market bonds and sending currencies into a tailspin.

South Africa has already raised the alarm, warning that the tariffs would result in major job losses in the steel, aluminium and auto industries.

President Cyril Ramaphosa described the measures as incompatib­le with the World Trade Organisati­on’s rules.

“We are worried about these measures as they affect developing nations,” he said. South Africa is among developing countries affected by the US’s 25 percent tariff on steel and 10 percent on aluminium introduced in March, Ramaphosa said.

“Unilateral­ism and protection­ism are mounting… dealing a severe blow to the multilater­al trading regime. The internatio­nal community has again reached a new crossroads.”

Xi said multilater­alism must be upheld and urged all role players to observe internatio­nal rules. He said world trade needed to conducted on equal basis irrespecti­ve of the partner’s economic muscle.

“When new rules are made on… trade and intellectu­al property… we should make sure the views of emerging markets and developing nations are heeded.”

Brazilian Minister of External Relations Aloysio Nunes Ferreira characteri­sed protection­ism as among things taking the BRICS countries backward, saying: “They represent things that happened in World War II, for example on trade rules.”

He said the stability of trade rules and necessary support was important for all countries involved in trade.

Chinese Minister of Commerce Zhong Shan said contentiou­s protection­ism and trade war were some of the “key issues” they were working on.

“We will oppose any kind of unilateral­ism and protection­ism,” he said, and called for trade relations between BRICS countries to be more pragmatic and institutio­nalised.

Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies characteri­sed the trade war as a full-frontal attack in which shots had already been fired.

Davies said 7 000 South Africans jobs in the affected industries were already on the line as a result of the tariffs.

Davies said unilateral­ism had a detrimenta­l effect on trade patterns.

“All of us as government­s have accepted that we are in support of a multilater­al rules-based trading system… we don’t believe they should be undermined and weakened,” he said, adding that South Africa had become collateral damage in the trading war.

“We are not party to the trading wars but many of us have been affected by the measures. We are very much non-combatants in this. Non-combatant collateral damage is where we find ourselves,” he said.

“We are seeing the shots being fired in the actual war. We are concerned about the post-war outcomes.”

 ?? PHOTO: GCIS ?? President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China with President Cyril Ramaphosa at the BRICS Business Forum at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.
PHOTO: GCIS President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China with President Cyril Ramaphosa at the BRICS Business Forum at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.
 ?? PHOTO: GCIS ?? Minister Rob Davis, Deputy at BRICS Business Forum.
PHOTO: GCIS Minister Rob Davis, Deputy at BRICS Business Forum.

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