Las Vegas Review-Journal

World prepares for trade warfare

EU, China have responses ready

- By Paul Wiseman The Associated Press

WASHINGTON —The United States attacked first, imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum from around the globe and threatenin­g to hit tens of billions of dollars in Chinese products.

Now, the world is punching back.

The European Union is set Friday to slap tariffs on $3.4 billion in American products, from whiskey and motorcycle­s to peanuts and cranberrie­s. India and Turkey have already targeted U.S. products, ranging from rice to autos to sunscreen.

And the highest-stakes fight still looms: In two weeks, the U.S. is to start taxing $34 billion in Chinese goods. Beijing has vowed to immediatel­y retaliate with its own tariffs on U.S. soybeans and other farm products in a direct shot at President Donald Trump’s supporters in America’s heartland.

The tit-for-tat conflict between the U.S. and China — the world’s two largest economies — is poised to escalate from there. The rhetoric is already intensifyi­ng.

“We oppose the act of extreme pressure and blackmail by swinging the big stick of trade protection­ism,” a spokesman for China’s Commerce Ministry said Thursday. “The U.S. is abusing the tariff methods and starting trade wars all around the world.”

Cecilia Malmstrom, the EU’S trade commission­er, acknowledg­ed that the EU had targeted some iconic American imports for tariffs, like Harley-davidson

TRADE

motorcycle­s and bourbon, to “make noise” and put pressure on U.S. leaders.

John Murphy, a senior vice president at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, estimates that $75 billion in U.S. products will be subject to new foreign tariffs by the end of the first week of July.

“We’ve never seen anything like this,” said Mary Lovely, a Syracuse University economist who studies internatio­nal trade — at least not since countries tried to wall themselves off from foreign competitio­n during the Great Depression.

Those personally in the line of fire are among the most concerned.

“It will be a disaster,” said Nagesh Balusu, manager of the Salt Whisky Bar and Dining Room in London,

who expects the European Union’s tariffs to add more than $7 to the price of a bottle of Jack Daniels, which is imported from Tennessee. “It’s going to hit customers; that’s for sure. How they’ll take it, we’ll have to wait and see.”

As painful as the brewing trade war could prove, many have seen it coming.

Trump ran for the presidency on a vow to topple seven decades of American policy that had favored ever-freer trade among nations. He charged that a succession of poorly negotiated accords — including the North American Free Trade Agreement and the pact that admitted China into the World Trade Organizati­on — put American manufactur­ers at an unfair disadvanta­ge and destroyed millions of U.S. factory jobs.

He pledged to impose tariffs on imports from countries that Trump said had exploited the U.S. Late last

month, Trump proceeded to infuriate U.S. allies, from the EU to Canada and Mexico, by imposing tariffs of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum. The president justified the move by saying imported metals threatened America’s national security.

And he is threatenin­g to impose another national security-based tariff on imports of cars, trucks and auto parts.

Trump has also started a trade fight with China over Beijing’s efforts to overtake U.S. technologi­cal dominance. China’s tactics range from forcing American companies to hand over technology for access to the Chinese market to cybertheft.

The White House last week announced plans to slap 25 percent tariffs on 1,100 Chinese goods, worth $50 billion in imports. Trump would start July 6 by taxing $34 billion worth of products and later add tariffs on an additional $16 billion in goods.

The Chinese have said they will respond in kind. Trump said he would then retaliate against any counterpun­ch from Beijing by targeting an additional $200 billion in Chinese products and then yet another

$200 billion.

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