China Daily

Trade tariffs branded bad for jobs

Consumers will also be affected by Trump import tax, experts say

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington and REN QI in Beijing Contact the writers at renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

US President Donald Trump’s move on Tuesday to tax imported solar cells and washing machines has drawn criticism from political, business and academic communitie­s.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi mounted a defense of globalizat­ion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, on Tuesday, urging joint action on climate change and economic cooperatio­n, in a speech some delegates took as a swipe at Trump’s “America First” agenda.

Modi, making the forum’s first speech by an Indian head of state in more than two decades, did not mention Trump by name but he criticized the rise of protection­ism in remarks delivered three days before the US president is expected to address the forum.

“Instead of globalizat­ion, the power of protection­ism is putting its head up,” Modi said. “Their wish is not only to save themselves from globalizat­ion, but to change the natural flow of globalizat­ion.”

China will defend its legitimate interests with other members of the World Trade Organizati­on, the Ministry of Commerce said on Tuesday. It expressed its strong dissatisfa­ction with the US for enacting such a broad measure that it called an abuse of trade remedies.

The Republic of Korea’s Trade Minister Kim Hyunchong also said the new US tariffs violated WHO rules.

“The US has opted for measures that put political considerat­ions ahead of internatio­nal standards,” Kim said. “The (ROK) government will actively respond to the spread of protection­ist measures to defend national interests.”

The move by Trump enables Washington to impose a 20 percent tariff on the first 1.2 million imported large residentia­l washing machines in the first year, and a 50 percent tariff on additional imports. The tariffs fall to 16 percent and 40 percent, respective­ly, in the third year.

Both Samsung Electronic­s and LG Electronic­s expressed concern over US tariffs, saying they would hurt US consumers and jobs.

Some analysts in Seoul said Trump was stepping up pressure on the Asian ally to rely more on him when dealing with the Democratic Republic of Korea, while gaining leverage in renegotiat­ing a bilateral free trade pact he has previously labeled “horrible”.

“Security and trade are linked to each other under Trump,” said Choi Won-mog, an internatio­nal trade law expert at ROK’s Ewha University.

Opposition from home

Mexican government also said it regrets the US decision not to exclude it from tariffs on imported washing machines and solar panels, and will “use all available legal resources in response to the decision”.

The US has opted for measures that put political considerat­ions ahead of internatio­nal standards.” Kim Hyun-chong, ROK’s trade minister

The move, approved by US government on Monday, also received opposition from home.

US solar energy industry has decried the Trump decision as killing US jobs. Many US lawmakers have also voiced their opposition.

Senator John McCain, a Republican from Arizona, tweeted on Tuesday that “Trump admin’s new protection­ist tariffs nothing more than a tax on consumers”.

Lloyd Smucker, a Republican from Pennsylvan­ia, said in a tweet that “this solar tariff decision is misguided”.

Ben Sasse, a Republican Senator from Nebraska, said Republican­s need to understand that tariffs are a tax on consumers.

“Moms and dads shopping on a budget for a new washing machine will pay for this — not big companies,” he said in a statement.

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