The Borneo Post

Trump lashes out at Beijing in trade war

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WASHINGTON: The United States and China exchanged blows Friday as each side increased punitive tariffs on the other, intensifyi­ng a trade war that is threatenin­g to engulf the global economy.

In a rapid back-and-forth, Beijing took action against US$75 billion in American goods in response to US tariffs announced Aug 1, and President Donald Trump lashed out in return by increasing existing and planned tariffs on a total of US$550 billion in Chinese products.

Trump’s blistering Twitter screeds called into doubt chances for a quick resolution to the trade war between the world’s economic superpower­s, which by the end of the year will cover nearly all imports and exports exchanged between the two countries.

Accusing China of “taking advantage of the United States on Trade, Intellectu­al Property Theft, and much more,” Trump said, “we must Balance this very ...unfair Trading Relationsh­ip.”

Existing 25 per cent tariffs on US$250 billion in Chinese goods will increase to 30 per cent starting Oct 1, Trump said.

And tariffs on US$300 billion in products, due to take effect Sept 1 at 10 per cent, will now be set at 15 per cent, he said.

“China should not have put new Tariffs on 75 BILLION DOLLARS of United States product (politicall­y motivated!).”

While Beijing worked for three weeks on its multi-tiered tariff response, Trump’s promised retaliatio­n — which came in a signature tweetstorm — was announced in less than 10 hours.

The rapidly changing conflict worries US companies, many of whom rely on China for inputs, for finished products they sell and for manufactur­ing.

“It’s impossible for businesses to plan for the future in this type of environmen­t,” said David French of the National Retail Federation.

“The administra­tion’s approach clearly isn’t working, and the answer isn’t more taxes on American businesses and consumers. Where does this end?”

The attack came with Trump expected to ruffle feathers in France at the weekend meeting of leaders of the G7 nations. Tensions are mounting between Trump and the Europeans, Canada and Japan over trade tariffs.

The friction has already slowed US growth and undercut the global economy, and the threat of a deteriorat­ion sent stock markets falling sharply.

The Dow lost more than 600 points to close with a loss of 2.4 per cent.

The German DAX lost more than one per cent but London’s FTSE gained ground.

“Our great American companies are hereby ordered to immediatel­y start looking for an alternativ­e to China, including bringing ... your companies HOME and making your products in the USA.” “We don’t need China and, frankly, would be far ... better off without them,” Trump said.

It was unclear under what authority Trump could demand that private companies alter their production.

But the influentia­l US Chamber of Commerce urged the two sides to return to the negotiatin­g table to find a solution.

“While we share the president’s frustratio­n, we believe that continued, constructi­ve engagement is the right way forward,” Myron Brilliant, the business group’s head of internatio­nal affairs, said in a statement.

China’s punitive tariffs of five to 10 per cent will apply to 5,078 US items, and are timed to start in tandem with the new US duties set to take effect in two steps Sept 1 and Dec 15, China’s state council tariff office said.

Beijing also announced it would reimpose a 25 per cent tariff on US autos and a five per cent tariff on auto parts, also starting Dec 15.

China had lifted those tariffs earlier this year as a goodwill measure while trade talks were underway. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows shipping containers from China and Asia are unloaded at the Long Beach port, California. — AFP photo
File photo shows shipping containers from China and Asia are unloaded at the Long Beach port, California. — AFP photo

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