Sun.Star Pampanga

China vows ‘same strength’ measure against US tariffs

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BEIJING — China on Wednesday vowed to impose measures of the “same strength” in response to a proposed U.S. tariff hike on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods in a spiraling technology dispute that has fueled fears it might set back the global economic r ecover y.

The Commerce Ministry said it would immediatel­y challenge the U.S. move in the World Trade Organizati­on.

“At the same time, we are preparing to take measures of the same strength and same scope against U.S. goods,” said a ministry statement. “These measures will be announced shortly.”

The latest clash reflects growing tension between President Donald Trump’s promises to narrow the multibilli­on-dollar U.S. trade deficit with China and Beijing’s ambitious developmen­t plans. Those include using its vast market as leverage to induce foreign companies to help create local industry and technology.

Chinese officials have given no indication what U.S. goods might be targeted but businesspe­ople and economists have cited Boeing jetliners and soybeans as possible targets.

The dispute has fueled fears it might set back the global recovery if other government­s are prompted to raise their own import barriers.

American companies have long chafed under Chinese regulation­s that require them to operate through local partners and share technology with potential competitor­s in exchange for market access. Business groups say companies feel increasing­ly unwelcome in China’s state-dominated economy and are being squeezed out of promising indust r i es.

The

U.S.

Trade Representa­tive’s Office said it was responding to Chinese policies that “coerce American companies into transferri­ng their technology and intellectu­al property to domestic Chinese enterprise­s.”

A USTR report on Chinese industrial policy released Tuesday also cited complaints Beijing carries out or supports cyberspyin­g to steal foreign business secrets, though it was unclear whether the latest tariff hike was in response to that.

Companies have warned Trump’s action might hurt U.S. companies and consumers.

“The administra­tion is rightly focused on restoring equity and fairness in our trade relationsh­ip with China,” said the executive vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Myron Brilliant, in a statement. “However, imposing taxes on products used daily by American consumers and job creators is not the way to achieve those ends.”

The USTR also launched a WTO case last month challengin­g Chinese policies it said unfairly limit foreign companies’ ability to control their technology. U.S. authoritie­s say Beijing denies foreign companies the right to block use of technology by a Chinese entity once a licensing period ends and imposes contract terms that are less favorable than for local technology.

Foreign companies are increasing­ly alarmed by initiative­s such as Beijing’s long-range industry developmen­t plan, dubbed “Made in China 2025,” which calls for creating Chinese global leaders in electric cars, robots and other fields. Foreign companies complain that strategy appears to limit or outright block access to those industries.

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