Lodi News-Sentinel

China reacts to U.S. tariffs, firmly but methodical­ly

- By Jessica Meyers

BEIJING — China on Friday announced it would impose retaliator­y import tariffs on 128 U.S. products — goods that amount to $3 billion — targeting staples that include California wines, fruits and almonds.

The move follows President Donald Trump’s decision this week to slap tariffs on about $50 billion worth of Chinese goods, triggering a potentiall­y damaging trade confrontat­ion with Beijing.

Chinese officials said the proposed actions were in response to the White House’s previous tariffs on steel and aluminum, which took effect Friday.

But the timing, hours after Trump made his White House announceme­nt to impose tariffs specifical­ly aimed at China, sent an unmistakab­le message.

The lopsided responses — China’s Ministry of Commerce posted a relatively staid comment on its website — signal vastly different strategies between the world’s two largest economies in an escalating dispute that has raised fears of a trade war.

Trump wants quick action and big results. China is aiming for restrained, targeted movements — an attempt to ward off a full-on conflict, while also showing it won’t cede too much ground.

“China is playing this very smartly, doing just enough retaliatio­n to prove it’s serious,” said Arthur Kroeber, managing director of Gavekal Dragonomic­s, a Beijing research firm. “It’s doing what it can to position itself as the global good guy, with a fair amount of success.”

China’s tariffs would first hit U.S. products such as avocados and nuts, with 15 percent duties. Beijing, if officials deemed it worthwhile, could also place 25 percent tariffs on American-made goods such as pork and aluminum.

Friday’s statement did not indicate a date the tariffs would go into effect, but noted that businesses had until March 31 to offer opinions. It said officials would “take legal action within the framework of the World Trade Organizati­on.”

This announceme­nt did not mention Trump’s latest tariffs, which follow an investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices and its harm to American businesses. Officials, as expected, found that China forced U.S. companies to hand over their trade secrets or make unfair concession­s for access to its vast market.

But in a separate statement, Chinese officials called Trump’s intellectu­al-property investigat­ion “typical unilateral­ism and trade protection­ism.” China doesn’t want a trade war, it said, “but is absolutely not afraid of a trade war.”

Trump’s announceme­nt battered the stock markets in Asia and the U.S., where the Dow Jones industrial average has sunk more than 1,100 points the last two days.

Analysts struggled to immediatel­y understand why items such as wine, a product from the Democratic stronghold of California, would make the list but not top U.S. imports such as sorghum and soybeans. Chinese officials last month launched an inquiry into American sorghum imports, and both agricultur­al products come from regions more supportive of Trump.

“We are technicall­y in rhetorical territory here,” said Andrew Polk, cofounder of Trivium/China, a Beijingbas­ed research firm. “There is a small window to effect policy. ... They’re going to make a little noise, but then they’re going to let U.S. industry and the stock market do the talking for them.”

The White House will publish the list of targeted goods within the next 15 days, and Chinese authoritie­s may be waiting until they see the breakdown or face even heftier actions. China’s top economic officials, a number of whom were educated in the U.S., are known for their savvy regarding the American system and its electoral cycles.

“For Trump, it is easier to blame other countries for the U.S.’ problems and garner votes in the midterm election, instead of taking the pain to restructur­e

the country’s economy,” China Daily, a state-run English newspaper, said Friday in an editorial. “He cannot force China to give in, however, because China knows the U.S.’ demands are insatiable.”

China is one of the world’s most protection­ist countries, and American businesses have long complained about requiremen­ts to create joint ventures or sacrifice proprietar­y informatio­n. In addition to the U.S.-imposed tariffs, the Treasury Department will restrict Chinese investment in American tech firms.

Trump’s tariffs reflect beliefs that years of negotiatio­ns have failed, and China now threatens its security and success in areas like artificial intelligen­ce. Under President Xi Jinping, China has sought to strengthen its advanced industries and global standing. Officials there view the U.S. domination of leading technologi­es as a challenge to Chinese interests.

The U.S. is essentiall­y demanding that China “provide as much market access to the U.S. as the U.S. provides to China,” said Scott Kennedy, an expert on China’s economic policy at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “That’s a really big list for China. Xi Jinping is a nationalis­t ... and he’s not interested in giving the U.S. or anyone else a level playing field.”

 ??  ??
 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? A farm worker drives a truck that sprays and fans out herbicide on an almond tree farm in 2015 in Modesto.
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH A farm worker drives a truck that sprays and fans out herbicide on an almond tree farm in 2015 in Modesto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States