Chattanooga Times Free Press

Why U.S. consumers could feel the impact of Trump’s China tariffs,

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

WASHINGTON — From toys to clothes to shoes to cellphones, Americans buy a half-trillion dollars’ worth of goods from China each year — the biggest haul of imports from any one country. And that means the prices of many such products could surge as a result of President Donald Trump’s plan to impose tariffs on up to $60 billion of imports from China.

White House officials say they will try to minimize any price increases for American shoppers. Instead, they suggested Thursday that the tariffs would mostly target products that businesses, rather than consumers, buy: Computers, informatio­n technology products, industrial machinery and aircraft parts.

“If they had done it on clothing, footwear and iPhones, that would have more of an immediate impact,” Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, said. “That doesn’t seem like what they’re doing here.”

Analysts note, though, that many businesses would eventually pass on any higher import costs to consumers in the form of higher prices.

Most modern appliances include electrical components from China. Think of semiconduc­tors and transistor­s that run the touchscree­n panels and beeping alarms in refrigerat­ors, washing machines and dishwasher­s. Many cars also include high-tech components.

“If they put the tariff on things that you can’t see, then consumers may say, ‘They’re not putting a tariff on my Ford Escort, or my Maytag refrigerat­or,’ but they are,” said Robert Atkinson, president of the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation, a trade associatio­n.

About 30 major retail

chains, including Big Lots, Costco, Gap, and Kohl’s Department Stores, wrote the White House earlier this week to argue that a “broadly applied tariff remedy on imports from China” would “hurt American households.”

For now, details about the administra­tion’s actions remain sparse. The White House says it plans to publish a list of proposed tariffs for public comment within 15 days. But Trump administra­tion trade officials have identified as potential targets 1,300 product lines worth about $48 billion. That list will then be open to a 30-day comment period that will allow businesses to weigh in.

Last year, according to government figures, the United States imported $70 billion of cellphones and related parts from China. America also imported $11.5 billion of shoes and nearly $21 billion of furniture from China — more than from any other country in each case. The United States also imports about $27 billion in toys from China.

But America also buys an enormous bounty of high-tech products from China — nearly $46 billion in computers, $32 billion in computer parts and accessorie­s and $9.6 billion in semiconduc­tors.

Those figures include network server computers that businesses buy.

On Wall Street on Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average plunged more than 700 points after the sanctions were announced. And industrial and technology companies, which depend heavily on foreign trade, took some of the worst losses. Boeing, Caterpilla­r and Microsoft, for example, all tumbled.

Atkinson warned that the tariffs could slow economic growth because the high-tech goods targeted by the administra­tion, along with the industrial machinery, are the kinds of equipment that tend to boost the productivi­ty of workers when companies invest in them. The Trump administra­tion’s corporate tax cuts, in fact, were structured in ways to encourage such investment­s.

Atkinson calculates that 12 percent of the high-tech equipment that U.S. businesses and consumers bought in 2016 came from China.

“Consumers will be hit with a double-whammy,” Atkinson said. “They’ll be paying more for products that have these components in them. And they’ll paying more because the U.S. economy won’t be growing as much.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks before he signs a presidenti­al memorandum imposing tariffs and investment restrictio­ns on China in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House Thursday. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, United States Trade...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks before he signs a presidenti­al memorandum imposing tariffs and investment restrictio­ns on China in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House Thursday. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, United States Trade...

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