The Oklahoman

Trump tariff

- BY PAUL WISEMAN AND DAVID KOENIG AP Business Writers

President Trump’s move to tax imported solar cells and washing machines is meant to make good on his vow to to protect American jobs.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s move Tuesday to tax imported solar cells and washing machines is meant to make good on his vow to reverse decades of U.S. support for free trade and to protect American jobs from foreign competitio­n.

But the tariffs — already denounced by China, Germany and Mexico — are likely to heighten tensions between the United States and its trade partners, slow the U.S. solar-installati­on business and raise prices for American consumers. And even touchier trade cases lie ahead, involving China’s overproduc­tion of steel and aluminum and its theft of trade secrets, with consequenc­es for American industry and workers.

“My administra­tion is committed to defending American companies, and they’ve been very badly hurt from harmful import surges that threaten the livelihood of their workers,” Trump said as he signed the tariffs. “The United States will not be taken advantage of anymore.”

Trump had campaigned on the argument that foreign nations had long outmaneuve­red the United States at the negotiatin­g table and had unfairly subsidized their own industries at the expense of American jobs. He pledged to return manufactur­ing jobs to America by killing or renegotiat­ing trade deals and cracking down on such countries as China and Mexico that sell more to the United States than they buy from it.

Almost as soon as he took office, Trump abandoned an Asia-Pacific trade pact negotiated by the Obama administra­tion. And Trump’s trade team is engaged in a contentiou­s effort to rewrite the 24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.

But until Tuesday, the administra­tion had not imposed major tariffs on imported goods. It is now slapping an immediate tariff of 30 percent on most imported solar modules; the rate will gradually phase out in four years. For large residentia­l washing machines, tariffs will start at up to 50 percent and phase out after three years.

Trade Act of 1974

The White House is dusting off a trade weapon not used since President George W. Bush imposed tariffs on imported steel in 2002. The Trade Act of 1974 allows a president to temporaril­y impose tariffs or other trade barriers on imports that are deemed to damage U.S. industries.

The solar case emerged from a complaint by two U.S.-based companies that manufactur­ed solar cells, the building blocks of solar panels: Suniva Inc., the Georgia-based subsidiary of a Chinese firm, which declared bankruptcy in April; and SolarWorld Americas, the U.S. subsidiary of a German company.

The two companies argued that they had been crushed by an influx of cheap imported solar cells and modules, mostly produced by Chinese companies. China’s share of global solar-cell production shot up from 7 percent in 2005 to nearly 70 percent last year. As prices plunged, nearly 30 U.S. plants closed over the past five years.

Abigail Ross Hopper, president of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, predicts that the tariffs will wipe out 23,000 jobs and mean that 1.2 million homes won’t be outfitted with solar power.

“They’re significan­t numbers if you think about employment, and they’re certainly significan­t numbers if you think about investment,” she says. Joseph Osha, an energy analyst with JMP Securities, says he doubts the new tariffs will raise solar prices enough to revive U.S. manufactur­ing. And he thinks China may not bother to retaliate with trade sanctions of their own.

“This is not enough to allow any manufactur­ing to take root in the U.S.,” Osha says. “So I think (the Chinese) looked at it and said, ‘Whatever.’”

The washing-machine case dates back to a 2011 complaint by Whirlpool, which charged that South Korean competitor­s LG and Samsung were dumping low-priced machines in the U.S. market. To avoid duties imposed by the Commerce Department, the companies shifted production, first to China and then to Thailand and Vietnam.

Praise and criticism

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, hailed the new tariffs.

“This is welcome news for the thousands of Whirlpool workers in Clyde, Ohio, whose jobs have been threatened by a surge of cheap washers,” he said. “These tariffs will help level the playing field, and show anyone who tries to cheat our trade laws that they won’t get away with it.”

But critics warned that the tariffs will drive up washing-machine prices. ”Tariffs are taxes on families,” said U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Nebraska. “Moms and dads shopping on a budget for a new washing machine will pay for this — not big companies.”

Tired of the wrangling, the South Korean companies announced plans last year to build plants in the United States — Samsung in Newberry, South Carolina, and LG is Clarksvill­e, Tennessee.

Dan Ikenson, director of the libertaria­n Cato Institute’s Center for Trade Policy, says the solar and washing-machine tariffs by themselves are unlikely to ignite a broader trade war because similar cases have been handled through the World Trade Organizati­on, which rules on trade disputes.

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