Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ross says ‘we’ll see’ on tariffs for China

- TODD SHIELDS

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said “we’ll see” when asked about plans to impose tariffs on Chinese imports, as the U.S. prepares to reveal its list of final targets this week.

Ross also said that legislatio­n that would restore penalties on the China’s ZTE Corp. is not a certainty as the measure still needs final approval. “We’ll see if it does” get through Congress, Ross said in an interview after an event in Washington on Tuesday.

The Trump administra­tion is proceeding with plans to impose tariffs on at least $50 billion of Chinese goods over accusation­s of intellectu­al property theft.

Three rounds of highlevel negotiatio­ns between the world’s two largest economies have so far failed to make enough progress for President Donald Trump to drop his tariff threat. The U.S. will reveal its final list of Chinese goods that will be subject to new duties by Friday and restrictio­ns on Chinese investment in the U.S. on June 30, with both applied shortly after. China has vowed to retaliate and said further negotiatio­ns

over trade with the U.S. will be impossible if the tariffs are implemente­d.

White House Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Kevin Hassett, speaking at a separate event in Washington on Tuesday, said Trump is “very serious” about China addressing its alleged intellectu­al property abuses and forced technology transfers.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, who led the investigat­ion into China’s trading practices, “has identified some actions that the Chinese need to change and if they commit to doing that then I’m sure that we’ll be able to think about next

steps,” Hassett said.

The Senate voted 91-4 late Monday to begin debate on the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, including an amendment that will keep more severe restrictio­ns on ZTE for violating sanctions. The provision was included on a list of amendments that is backed by both Republican­s and Democrats.

Ross last week announced the U.S. reached a deal with the Chinese telecommun­ications company that included a record fine, changes to the company’s board and management and deployment of U.S. compliance officers. He cautioned at the time that the U.S. still retains “the power to shut them down again.”

The U.S. in April had blocked ZTE’s access to U.S. suppliers, saying the company

violated a 2017 sanctions settlement related to trading with Iran and North Korea and then lied about the violations. The company announced it was shutting down just weeks after the ban was announced.

Trump has said he reviewed the penalties as a personal favor to Chinese President Xi Jinping. Lifting the sales ban on ZTE was a key demand China made in the broader trade talks with the U.S. to avert a trade war.

The deal has sparked bipartisan push-back, with many lawmakers citing national security as their main concern.

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