Shanghai Daily

AmCham says nearly 70% of US firms in China oppose tariffs

- Huang Yixuan TRADE

CLOSE to 70 percent of US companies doing business in China opposed tariffs, according to a survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai.

The survey also pointed out that most US companies operating in China expected to raise investment in 2018

China and the US are engaged in a tit-for-tat retaliator­y tariff battle but 69 percent of the 434 respondent­s in the survey opposed tariffs while only 8.5 percent supported them. Another 22.6 percent were unsure how they felt, the report released by AmCham yesterday showed.

“Opposition to retaliator­y tariffs was firmest in sectors likely to be targeted by Chinese counterret­aliatory tariffs, including non-consumer electronic­s (95 percent), chemicals (85 percent) and agricultur­e and food companies (78 percent),” said Kenneth Jarrett, president of AmCham Shanghai.

Faint support for tariffs was concentrat­ed in services, led by education and training as well as legal services because these businesses felt they had little to lose, Jarrett added.

On a slightly brighter note, the survey also highlighte­d that 61.6 percent of US companies operating in China would increase their investment in 2018, led by those in the technology, services, and aviation sectors. This more optimistic note came despite a mild drop in investment growth in 2017.

More companies are also beginning to prioritize China in their investment strategies.

Companies whose first investment priority was China rose 3 percent to 27 percent, while 30 percent said it was their second to third priority, the survey revealed.

Overall 80 percent of the companies were optimistic, identical to last year, the chamber said.

Companies also believe that in the past few years Chinese government policies and regulation­s toward foreign companies have improved slightly with 34 percent of the respondent­s seeing improvemen­ts, a 6 percent rise from a year earlier, according to the survey.

Meanwhile a clear majority of respondent­s hailed China’s increasing consumptio­n for the opportunit­ies afforded to them over the next three to five years. Companies also welcomed innovation­s in technology, media, telecommun­ications and urbanizati­on, according to the survey.

But 44 percent of the companies reported that policies and regulation­s had remained the same. Over 20 percent of the respondent­s said the environmen­t had worsened, according to the survey.

In the next three to five years, companies will face the top three challenges of labor cost concerns, domestic competitio­n, and an economic slowdown, the survey showed.

Also noteworthy, respondent­s said that lack of intellectu­al property rights protection and enforcemen­t as well as obtaining licenses were seen as the top two regulatory obstacles.

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