Times of Suriname

China vows countermea­sures if US puts new tariffs on Chinese goods

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BEIJING China’s Commerce Ministry said Thursday that the country would have to take countermea­sures if the United States imposes new additional tariffs on Chinese goods.

This came after the United States threatened an additional tariff of 10 percent on about 300 billion U.S. dollars of Chinese imports. China’s position is consistent and clear. “Trade wars produce no winners. China does not want a trade war, but it is not afraid of one, and it will fight one if necessary,” Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gao Feng told a press conference. Although the United States announced a plan to postpone the tariff hike on some Chinese goods, any new US tariff hike will lead to an escalation of trade frictions unilateral­ly, Gao said. “If the United States acts arbitraril­y, China will have to take countermea­sures,” he said. The tariff measures will damage the interests of both China and the United States, and may also have a recessiona­ry impact on the global economy, Gao said.

“If the United States goes ahead willfully, it will have a serious negative impact on US businesses and consumers,” Gao said. “Some US financial institutio­ns have predicted that the tariffs would cost an ordinary US family 1,000 US dollars a year on average.” “At the same time, the delay in imposing tariffs on some goods fully demonstrat­e that there are no winners in a trade war,” he said. “If the trade frictions escalate, US consumers and businesses will suffer heavy losses.”

Gao expressed the hope that the US side would stop its erroneous practice of imposing tariffs, meet halfway with China, and find a solution to the problem based on equality and mutual respect. He said that the US move would pose certain challenges to China’s exports and economy, but the impact is fully controllab­le in general. “The Chinese side is confident, determined and capable of meeting various challenges and maintainin­g the sound and stable developmen­t of its economy and foreign trade,” he added. Chinese and US chief trade negotiator­s held a phone conversati­on on Aug. 13 and agreed to hold another phone conversati­on in two weeks. “The two negotiatin­g teams have maintained communicat­ion,” Gao said. (Xinhua)

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