Global Times

US companies warn tariffs will hurt all Americans

Duties would jeopardize welfare of children, add financial burdens

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A broad cross-section of US businesses has a message for the Trump administra­tion: new tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports will force Americans to pay more for items they use throughout their daily lives, from the cradle to the coffin.

Six days of public hearings on the proposed duties of up to 25 percent will start on Monday in Washington.

Unlike previous rounds of US tariffs, which sought to shield consumers by targeting Chinese industrial machinery, electronic components and other intermedia­te goods, thousands of consumer products could be directly hit with tariffs by late September.

The $200 billion list targets Chinese seafood, furniture and lighting products, tires, chemicals, plastics, bicycles and baby car seats.

“Proposed tariffs on an additional $200 billion of Chinese imports dramatical­ly expands the harm to American consumers, workers, businesses, and the economy,” the US Chamber of Commerce said in written testimony for the hearing. The top US business lobbying group has called for “serious discussion­s” with Beijing.

In more than 1,400 written comments submitted to the US Trade Representa­tive (USTR) that will be echoed in the hearings, most businesses argued that the tariffs will cause harm and higher costs for products ranging from Halloween costumes and Christmas lights to nuclear fuel inputs, while a small number praised them or asked that they be extended to other products.

Graco Children’s Products Inc, a unit of Newell Brands Inc, said tariffs “will have a direct negative impact on our company, American parents and most importantl­y the safety of American children.”

The company said higher prices may prompt more parents to buy car seats, swings and portable play yards on the second-hand market.

“The proposed tariffs may force parents to use unsafe sleeping environmen­ts or let children dangerousl­y co-sleep with parents,” Graco wrote. The tariff “only causes a children safety issue; it will not convince China to change its policies.”

At the other end of the life cycle, Centennial Casket Corp President Douglas Chen said his Plano, Texas-based company relies exclusivel­y on Chinese-made caskets and the tariffs would cause “great loss” and raise costs for “grieving families purchasing caskets for their loved ones at one of the worst times of their life.”

The Internet Associatio­n, representi­ng companies including Facebook Inc, Amazon. com Inc and Alphabet Inc, said the tariffs “would cause disproport­ionate economic harm to American internet companies. The list includes products that impact how internet companies function.”

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