Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump OKs tough China tariffs

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The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has approved a plan to impose tariffs on tens of billions of dollars of Chinese goods as early as Friday, a move that could put his trade policies on a collision course with his push to rid the Korean Peninsula of nuclear weapons.

Mr. Trump has long vowed to fulfill his campaign pledge to clamp down on what he considers unfair Chinese trading practices. But his calls for billions in tariffs could complicate his efforts to maintain China’s support in his negotiatio­ns with North Korea.

Mr. Trump met Thursday with several Cabinet members and trade advisers and was expected to impose tariffs on at least $35 billion to $40 billion of Chinese imports, according to an industry official and an administra­tion official familiar with the plans. The amount of goods could reach $55 billion, said the industry official. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the matter ahead of a formal announceme­nt.

If the president presses forward as expected, it could set the stage for a series of trade actions against China and lead to retaliatio­n from Beijing. Indeed, China’s government renewed its threat Thursday to scrap deals with Washington aimed at defusing the sprawling trade dispute.

Mr. Trump has already slapped tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and European allies, and his proposed tariffs against China risk starting a trade war involving the world’s two biggest economies.

The decision on the Chinese tariffs comes in the aftermath of Mr. Trump’s summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The president has coordinate­d closely with China on efforts to get Pyongyang to eliminate its nuclear arsenal. But he signaled that whatever the implicatio­ns, “I have to do what I have to do” to address the trade imbalance.

Mr. Trump, in his press conference in Singapore on Tuesday, said the U.S. has a “tremendous deficit in trade with China and we have to do something about it. We can’t continue to let that happen.” The U.S. trade deficit with China was $336 billion in 2017.

Administra­tion officials have signaled support for the tariffs in a dispute over allegation­s that Beijing steals or pressures foreign companies to hand over technology, according to officials briefed on the plans. China has targeted $50 billion in U.S. products for potential retaliatio­n.

Wall Street has viewed the escalating trade tensions with wariness, fearful that they could strangle the economic growth achieved during Mr. Trump’s watch and undermine the benefits of the tax cuts he signed into law last year.

“If you end up with a tariff battle, you will end up with price inflation, and you could end up with consumer debt. Those are all historic ingredient­s for an economic slowdown,” Gary Cohn, Mr. Trump’s former top economic adviser, said at an event sponsored by The Washington Post.

But Steve Bannon, Mr. Trump’s former White House and campaign adviser, said the crackdown on China’s trade practices was “the central part of Trump’s economic nationalis­t message. His fundamenta­l commitment to the ‘deplorable­s’ on the campaign trail was that he was going to bring manufactur­ing jobs back, particular­ly from Asia.”

In the trade fight, Mr. Bannon said, Mr. Trump has converted three major tools that “the American elites considered off the table” — namely, the use of tariffs, the technology investigat­ion of China and penalties on Chinese telecom giant ZTE.

“That’s what has gotten us to the situation today where the Chinese are actually at the table,” Mr. Bannon said. “It’s really not just tariffs, it’s tariffs on a scale never before considered.”

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