Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

China fires back as trade war intensifie­s

Beijing imposes retaliator­y tariffs after U.S. action

- By Joe McDonald

BEIJING — The U.S.China trade war escalated further Tuesday, with China announcing retaliator­y tax increases on $60 billion worth of U.S. imports, including coffee, honey and industrial chemicals.

The increases are in response to the U.S. announcing it will impose tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese-made goods starting next week. The tariffs will start at 10 percent, then rise to 25 percent Jan. 1.

China’s Finance Ministry said its tariff increases are aimed at curbing “trade friction” and the “unilateral­ism and protection­ism of the United States.”

There was no word on whether China would back out of trade talks it said it was invited to by the U.S., but a Chinese Commerce Ministry statement said the U.S. increase “brings new uncertaint­y to the consultati­ons.”

The two countries have already imposed import taxes on $50 billion worth of each other’s goods. President Donald Trump threatened to add an additional $267 billion in Chinese imports to the target list if China retaliated for the latest U.S. taxes. That would raise the total affected by U.S. penalties to $517 billion, covering nearly everything China sells to the United States.

At the root of the trade war are U.S. complaints about China’s plans to try to overtake U.S. technologi­cal supremacy. Those plans include “Made in China 2025,” which calls for creating powerful Chinese entities to compete in robotics and other fields. The U.S. says the plans are based on stolen technology, violate China’s marketopen­ing commitment­s and might erode American industrial leadership.

American companies and trading partners including the European Union and Japan have long-standing complaints about Chinese market barriers and industrial policy. But they object to Trump’s tactics and warn the dispute could chill global economic growth and undermine internatio­nal trade regulation.

Trump has strained relations with potential allies including the European Union, Canada and Mexico by raising tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. He demanded Canada and Mexico renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement to make it more favorable to the United States.

Trump has also complained about America’s gaping trade deficit — $336 billion last year — with China, its biggest trading partner.

The trade gap means China will run out of U.S. imports to tax while the U.S. still has plenty of Chinese imports to target. But Beijing has other ways to retaliate. American companies say regulators are already starting to disrupt their operations.

Last week, the American Chambers of Commerce in China and in Shanghai reported 52 percent of more than 430 companies that responded to a survey said they have faced slower customs clearance and increased inspection­s and bureaucrat­ic procedures.

The U.S. taxes are targeting Chinese goods that Washington says have benefited from improper industrial policies. Beijing’s tariffs have hit soybeans and other farm goods from states that voted for Trump in 2016.

In the first two rounds of tariffs, the Trump administra­tion took care to try to spare American consumers from the direct impact of the import taxes. The tariffs focused on industrial products.

By expanding the list to $200 billion of Chinese products, Trump may spread the pain to ordinary households. The administra­tion is targeting a variety of goods — from sockeye salmon to baseball gloves to bamboo mats — forcing U.S. companies to scramble for suppliers outside China, absorb the import taxes or pass along the cost to their customers.

The U.S. government did withdraw some items from its preliminar­y list of imports to be taxed, including child-safety products such as bicycle helmets. And in a victory for Apple Inc., the administra­tion removed smart watches and some other consumer electronic­s products.

 ?? WU HONG/EPA ?? A Chinese market sells clothes Tuesday in Beijing. China announced tariffs on $60 billion worth of U.S. imports.
WU HONG/EPA A Chinese market sells clothes Tuesday in Beijing. China announced tariffs on $60 billion worth of U.S. imports.

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