China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tariff ripple effects worry experts

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

China’s new tariffs on US agricultur­al products will have implicatio­ns for urban residents on the West Coast, not just rural communitie­s, experts say.

The agricultur­al industry on the West Coast will take a hit from China’s retaliator­y tariffs, which went into effect on April 2 and target primarily agricultur­al products, mostly produced in California.

It’s not just farmers and farms and rural businesses that will suffer.” Jamie Johansson, president, California Farm Bureau Federation

“I think Trump never understood agricultur­e, and never understood how important it (export) was to agricultur­e,” said Bill Perry, a Seattle-based internatio­nal trade lawyer.

The $3 billion worth of tariffs from China will hit farmers in Washington state hard, but despite the direct impact, there’s also an indirect impact valued at $3 billion to $4 billion, said Perry, who has represente­d Chinese producers and US importers for more than 30 years.

Although Washington state doesn’t produce soybeans, the ports of Seattle and Tacoma are major gateways for the $14 billion in soybean exports, he explained.

West Coast ports, including Oakland and the twin ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, are significan­t for agricultur­al products, such as nuts, fruit and meats, and are worth billions of dollars a year.

Experts said the reduction of trade activity will cause dock workers, truck drivers and other workers along the chain to take a hit, too.

“Agricultur­al trade creates jobs and opportunit­ies throughout our state. It’s not just farmers and rural businesses that will suffer if farm exports diminish,” Jamie Johansson, president of the California Farm Bureau Federation (CFBF), said in the organizati­on’s weekly newspaper AgAlert on April 11.

“Many people in our urban centers work in marketing and export jobs tied to agricultur­e. This situation will affect urban and rural California­ns alike,” he said.

US exporters of nuts, wine and fruit have been renegotiat­ing contracts with their buyers in China, while some products originally destined for China may be redirected to other locations, according to CFBF.

“All exports are local. Through my research I found that American local businesses are getting much better over the past 10 years at entering the Chinese market,” said Benjamin Leffel, Kugelman research fellow at the Center for Citizen Peacebuild­ing at UC-Irvine.

“The Trump administra­tion could accomplish a lot with China-US relations at the local level in particular,” Leffel said. “Punishing China with tariffs is not a good start. As Trump continues with the tariffs, it’s causing governors and mayors to fend for themselves.”

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