Los Angeles Times

Trump eyes more tariffs

President is poised to tax $200 billion worth of additional Chinese imports, sources say.

- By Jennifer Jacobs, Shawn Donnan, Andrew Mayeda and Saleha Mohsin Jacobs, Donnan, Mayedea and Mohsin write for Bloomberg.

President Trump wants to move ahead with a plan to impose tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports as soon as a public comment period concludes next week, according to six people familiar with the matter.

Companies and members of the public have until Sept. 6 to submit comments on the proposed duties, which cover everything from selfie sticks to semiconduc­tors.

Trump plans to impose the tariffs once that deadline passes, according to the people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussion­s aren’t public.

Stocks fell on the news. The offshore yuan dropped to the day’s low, while the dollar and the yen gained amid a flight to safety. The tariff news exacerbate­d already fragile market sentiment amid currency routs in Argentina and Turkey.

Some of the people cautioned that Trump hasn’t made his final decision, and it’s possible the administra­tion may enact the duties in installmen­ts. The United States has so far imposed levies on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods, with Beijing retaliatin­g in kind.

It’s also possible Trump could announce the tariffs next week but say they will take effect at a later date. The Trump administra­tion waited about three weeks after announcing in mid-June that it was imposing tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods before they were implemente­d. The next stage of tariffs, on $16 billion worth of goods, took hold this month.

The imposition of the $200-billion tranche would be the biggest so far and would mark an escalation in the trade war between the world’s two largest economies. It is likely to further unnerve financial markets that have been concerned about the growing tensions.

China has threatened to retaliate by slapping duties on $60 billion worth of U.S. goods. The Trump administra­tion is finalizing the list of Chinese targets and tariff rate, which could range from 10% to 25%, after six days of public hearings earlier this month.

Trump’s plan to bring down his biggest hit yet on China comes as two-way trade talks show little sign of progress. Discussion­s between U.S. and Chinese officials last week in Washington yielded few results, thwarting hopes for a quick deal.

The move comes as China hawks have been on the ascendancy in the Trump administra­tion. One of them — U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer — has been responsibl­e for one of the president’s biggest trade victories so far by forging a bilateral trade deal with Mexico to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement. The deal was announced Monday, and Canada is negotiatin­g to join.

The latest China tariff decision is causing heated debate within the administra­tion, with Lighthizer and White House trade advisor Peter Navarro pushing for quick action, and Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow arguing for more time, according to people familiar with the matter.

Trump cut off negotiatio­ns with China because of what he perceives as Beijing’s lack of cooperatio­n in nuclear talks with North Korea, one of the people said. The president wants to squeeze China, believing the United States has leverage over Beijing, that person said.

On Wednesday, Trump accused China of pressuring North Korea not to bend in nuclear negotiatio­ns with the United States. But he insisted that the trade difference­s would be resolved.

“As for the U.S.-China trade disputes, and other difference­s, they will be resolved in time by President Trump and China’s great President Xi Jinping. Their relationsh­ip and bond remain very strong,” Trump said on Twitter.

Edward Alden, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, said Lighthizer’s NAFTA successes were strengthen­ing his hand with the president.

That raised the possibilit­y that after months of being passed around various figures in the administra­tion, the talks with China could finally end in the hands of one of its most able negotiator­s and influentia­l China hawks.

If the president “hands the China file to Lighthizer, there’s a chance of real progress,” Alden said, adding that if Lighthizer is put in charge of China talks, that “at least opens the door to a serious negotiatio­n with China, which we have not seen yet.”

 ?? Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images ?? WORKERS unload goods at a port in China. President Trump is set to impose more tariffs on Chinese goods, sources say. The U.S. has so far imposed levies on $50 billion worth of imports, with Beijing retaliatin­g in kind.
Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images WORKERS unload goods at a port in China. President Trump is set to impose more tariffs on Chinese goods, sources say. The U.S. has so far imposed levies on $50 billion worth of imports, with Beijing retaliatin­g in kind.

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