The Oklahoman

Trump imposes more tariffs on Chinese goods

- BY PAUL WISEMAN AND MARTIN CRUTSINGER

China has had many opportunit­ies to fully address our concerns. Once again, I urge China’s leaders to take swift action to end their country’s unfair trade practices.”

President Donald Trump

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion will impose tariffs on $200 billion more in Chinese goods starting next week, escalating a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies and potentiall­y raising prices on consumer goods ranging from handbags to bicycle tires.

The tariffs will start at 10 percent, beginning Monday, and then rise to 25 percent Jan. 1.

President Donald Trump made the announceme­nt Monday evening in a move that is sure to ratchet up hostilitie­s between Washington and Beijing. Trump already has imposed 25 percent tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods. And China has retaliated in kind, hitting American soybeans, among other goods, in a shot at the president’s supporters in the U.S. farm belt. Beijing has warned that it would hit an additional $60 billion in American products if Trump ordered more tariffs.

Trump on Monday threatened to raise the stakes again if Beijing should retaliate, adding a further $267 billion in Chinese imports to the target list. That would raise the total to $517 billion — covering nearly everything China sells the United States.

After taking in public comments, the administra­tion said Monday that it had withdrawn several items from an earlier list of $200 billion in Chinese imports, including childsafet­y products like bicycle helmets. And in a victory for Apple Inc. and its American customers, the administra­tion removed smartwatch­es and some other consumer electronic­s products from the list of goods imported from China.

At the same time, the administra­tion said it is still open to negotiatio­ns with China.

“China has had many opportunit­ies to fully address our concerns,” Trump said in a statement. “Once again, I urge China’s leaders to take swift action to end their country’s unfair trade practices.”

The two countries are

fighting over Beijing’s ambitions to supplant American technologi­cal supremacy. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive charged in a March report that China is using predatory tactics to obtain foreign technology, including hacking U.S. companies to steal their trade secrets and forcing them to turn over their know-how in exchange for access to the Chinese market.

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

In the first two rounds of tariffs, the Trump administra­tion was careful to try to spare consumers from the direct impact of the import taxes. The levies focused on industrial products, not on things Americans buy at the mall or via Amazon.

By expanding the list

to $200 billion worth of Chinese imports, Trump risks spreading the pain to ordinary Americans. The administra­tion is targeting a bewilderin­g variety of products — from sockeye salmon to bamboo mats — forcing U.S. companies to scramble for suppliers outside China, absorb the import taxes or pass along the burden to their customers.

In a filing with the government, for instance, Giant Bicycles Inc. of Newbury Park, California, noting that 94 percent of imported bicycles came from China last year, complained that “there is no way our business can shift its supply chain to a new market” to avoid the tariffs and warned “a tariff increase of this magnitude will inevitably be paid for by the American consumer.”

Trump has reversed decades of U.S. policy in favor of ever-freer trade. He campaigned on a promise to tax imports and rewrite or tear up trade agreements that he said put U.S. companies and workers at a disadvanta­ge.

“The president’s negotiatin­g tactics do not work well with China’s way of thinking,” said Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at SS Economics in Los Angeles. “I think things will get worse. I fully expect the tariff rate will go up to 25 percent.”

Sohn said he believed China will retaliate against every U.S. tariff and the tit-for-tat exchanges will escalate until the U.S. is taxing all Chinese imports — $524 billion last year.

The U.S. economy appears strong enough to withstand damage from the tariff battle, he said.

“In the short term, we will have higher prices and fewer jobs than we would have had otherwise,” Sohn said. “Fortunatel­y, the U.S. economy is humming so we don’t have to worry as much about what this will do to our economy.”

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? A driver looks out Sunday from his trishaw decorated with an American flag and Chinese flags in Beijing. Chinese news reports have quoted a former finance minister as saying Beijing can disrupt American companies’ operations by imposing “export controls” if it needs more leverage in its mounting tariff dispute with Washington.
[AP PHOTO] A driver looks out Sunday from his trishaw decorated with an American flag and Chinese flags in Beijing. Chinese news reports have quoted a former finance minister as saying Beijing can disrupt American companies’ operations by imposing “export controls” if it needs more leverage in its mounting tariff dispute with Washington.

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