Trade war: Trump, China impose tariffs
President Donald Trump followed through Friday on his threat to crack down on China for its “very unfair” trade practices, announcing that he is impos
ing a 25-percent tariff on $50 billion in Chinese imports.
Beijing quickly responded. In a late-night statement, China’s Ministry of Commerce said it would impose trade barriers of the “same scale and the same strength.”
The Chinese government said Trump’s tariffs were “damaging” relations and “undermining the world trade order.”
U.S. and Chinese officials in recent weeks had made progress on a deal that involved up to $70 billion in additional purchases of American products. But the Chinese offer was now “invalid,” the statement said.
Chinese officials, who had signaled their intention to retaliate if Trump went through with his tariff plans, are targeting the president’s supporters in farm states and the industrial Midwest.
Anticipating the Chinese response, the president said that the United States would “pursue additional tariffs,” raising the specter of the titfor-tat trade war that business leaders and many congressional Republicans fear.
In a short White House statement, the president said the import tax would apply to “goods from China that contain industrially significant technologies.”
Friday’s action follows an administration report in March that complained China had forced foreign companies to surrender their technology secrets in return for market access and had pilfered other advanced U.S. technologies through a campaign of cyber
theft and investment in Silicon Valey startups.
“These practices ... harm our economic and national security and deepen our already massive trade imbalance with China,” Trump said.
The U.S. last year ran up a $375 billion deficit in goods trade with China, a figure the president blames on Chinese trade barriers. Most econo
mists say the gap is the result of broader forces such as Amer- icans’ low savings rate. On April 6, the administra
tion published a proposed list of 1,333 products targeted for tariffs. After hearing objections from business groups, U.S. Trade Representative Robert E. Lighthizer dropped 515 items and added 284 new ones.
As a result, the tariffs will be imposed in two steps. On July 6, customs officers will begin collecting the tax on an initial basket of goods valued at $34 billion, which were on the initial list. USTR, meanwhile, will field comments on the new items on the list, valued at $16 billion.
“These tariffs are essential to preventing further unfair transfers of American technology and intellectual property to China, which will protect American jobs,” the president said.
USTR also plans to establish a process for U.S. companies to request permission to continue importing the targeted items on a duty-free basis.
The Chinese government is pursuing a $300 billion program of subsidies to enable its companies to dominate next-generation technologies such as artificial intelligence, robotics and quantum computing, upping the stakes for Trump’s efforts to preserve U.S. technological secrets.
The president’s complaints about China’s trade practices are shared by many business leaders. But there is little support for using import taxes, which are paid by Americans, as a tool against the Chinese.
“Imposing tariffs places the cost of China’s unfair trade practices squarely on the shoulders of American consumers, manufacturers, farmers and ranchers. This is not the right approach,” said Tom Donohue, president and chief
executive of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The U.S. announcement comes at a complex juncture in U.S.-China relations.
Following a summit in Singapore between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stopped in Beijing for meetings with President Xi Jinping and other top Chinese leaders. On Thursday, Pompeo
thanked Xi for China’s help with North Korea and even wished the Chinese president a happy birthday.
But at a news conference with China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, tension over trade was clear. Pompeo said the U.S. trade deficit with China is still too high, and Wang called for Washington to makea “wise choice” on tariffs.