Santa Fe New Mexican

Publishers fear Bible shortage due to tariffs on China

Industry estimates as many as 150M are published there each year

- By Travis Loller Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Religious publishers say President Donald Trump’s most recent proposed tariffs on Chinese imports could result in a Bible shortage.

That’s because millions of Bibles — some estimates put it at 150 million or more — are printed in China each year. Critics of a proposed tariff say it would make Bibles more expensive for consumers and hurt the evangelism efforts of Christian organizati­ons that give away Bibles as part of their ministry.

HarperColl­ins Christian Publishing President and CEO Mark Schoenwald recently told the U.S. trade representa­tive the company believes the Trump administra­tion “never intended to impose a ‘Bible Tax’ on consumers and religious organizati­ons,” according to a transcript of his remarks provided by the publisher.

The two largest Bible publishers in the United States, Zondervan and Thomas Nelson, are owned by HarperColl­ins, and they incur close to 75 percent of their Bible manufactur­ing expenses in China, Schoenwald said. Together, they make up 38 percent

of the American Bible market, he said.

The full size of that market is difficult to gauge. A spokeswoma­n at HarperColl­ins said they believe around 20 million Bibles are sold in the U.S. each year.

The NDP group, which includes NPD BookScan and PubTrack Digital, captured 5.7 million print Bible sales in the U.S. in 2018. But that figure doesn’t capture all sales, including the large number of Bibles sold by publishers directly to congregati­ons.

Regardless, it’s clear the Bible is the top-selling book in the U.S. By comparison, the next best-seller in 2018 was Michelle Obama’s Becoming, which BookScan estimates sold 3.5 million copies.

The proposed 25 percent tariff would apply to all books, but critics say it would disproport­ionately affect Bibles and children’s books. Both tend to have specialize­d printing requiremen­ts that Chinese printers are set up to meet while many domestic printers are not.

“U.S. printers moved their Bible printing facilities abroad decades ago, leaving no substantia­l domestic manufactur­ing alternativ­es,” Schoenwald said.

Stan Jantz, president and CEO of the Evangelica­l Christian Publishers Associatio­n, said in a phone interview that over half of worldwide Bible production takes place in China. The tariff would hurt organizati­ons that give away Bibles and also make it difficult for publishers to sell the Bible at a price people can afford, he said.

“Traditiona­lly, historical­ly, books have been excluded from tariffs,” Jantz added.

Biblica, the Internatio­nal Bible Society, is a charitable religious organizati­on that gives away Bibles to people in 55 countries. China represents 72 percent of the group’s investment in Bible publishing, according to Biblica President and CEO Geof Morin.

A Bible tariff would “dramatical­ly affect the number of Bibles we are able to print and give away, impacting the religious freedom of individual­s in countries where Bible access is limited and often nonexisten­t,” Morin said in testimony to the trade representa­tive, according to a transcript he provided.

The critics also argue that a tariff on books would not advance the purported goals of the tariff, to stop the Chinese from acquiring American technology, trade secrets and intellectu­al property.

“The printing of books does not require significan­t technology or know-how that is at risk of theft or appropriat­ion by China,” Tyndale House CEO Mark Taylor said in written comments on the tariffs.

For now, the publishers and other Bible distributo­rs must simply wait to see if their pleas will be answered.

Trump and President Xi Jinping of China agreed at a recent meeting of the Group of 20 major economies to resume trade negotiatio­ns, a decision that puts all the proposed tariffs on hold for now.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Millions of Bibles are printed in China each year. Some worry that rising prices will affect proselytiz­ing groups that give Bibles away.
MARTA LAVANDIER ASSOCIATED PRESS Millions of Bibles are printed in China each year. Some worry that rising prices will affect proselytiz­ing groups that give Bibles away.

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