Los Angeles Times

Allies assail tariffs, China shrugs

Chinese firms, target of Trump’s duties, probably won’t be affected much.

- By Jessica Meyers Meyers is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Kate Linthicum in Mexico City contribute­d to this report, as did special correspond­ents Kemeng Fan and Nicole Liu in Beijing, Yuri Nagano in Tokyo and Jill Langlois in Sao Paulo, Bra

BEIJING — President Trump has repeatedly singled out China for the kind of unfair trade he aimed to curb this week by smacking tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. But in the fallout, China is the one emerging relatively unscathed.

Trump gave a reprieve to Canada and Mexico, for now, and suggested allies such as Australia also may receive exemptions. Countries around the globe, including Japan and South Korea, scrambled to get on the list. Leaders loudly condemned the move, which threatens to explode into a trade war and rupture America’s most important alliances in Asia.

“This is not just about Japan,” said Ken Onuki, director of general affairs at the Japan Aluminum Assn. “It’s a violation of free trade.”

Japan’s trade minister called the decision “extremely regrettabl­e,” and South Korean officials said they might lodge a protest with the World Trade Organizati­on.

China, the world’s largest producer of steel and aluminum, denounced the tariffs as an affront to the internatio­nal trade order. The country will take “effective measures” and safeguard its rights based on the damage caused, the Ministry of Commerce said on its website.

It probably won’t feel much. China accounted for about 2.5% of U.S. steel imports last year, a result of previous restrictio­ns. It also exports a fraction of the aluminum the U.S. receives.

“It seems the U.S. administra­tion keeps on shooting at the wrong target,” Hong Kong-based analysts Alicia Garcia Herrero and Jianwei Xu said in a research note for Natixis, a French investment bank.

Chinese officials routinely warn about the reciprocal damage of a trade war, but kept fairly quiet about the tariffs in the lead-up to Trump’s announceme­nt Thursday. China views it as a welcome distractio­n, analysts say, from more biting tariffs on industries such as high-tech or semiconduc­tors. Officials appear more anxious about the results of an American investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices.

“China is definitely happy to let the other countries fight this battle for them,” said Andrew Polk, cofounder of Trivium/China, a Beijing-based research firm. “The reaction to the tariffs couldn’t have played into China’s hands any better.”

The nation’s rapid industrial growth helped create a global glut that, American steelmaker­s attest, has driven down prices and hurt U.S. jobs. Trump says that China delivers more steel to the U.S. via third countries, a process known as transshipp­ing.

It’s “a big deal,” he said at a news conference this week. But there is little evidence to prove this actually boosts China’s steel exports to the U.S.

“From the U.S. perspectiv­e, Korea appears to be like the gateway for the transshipm­ent from China to U.S. markets, so we became one of the major targets,” said Ahn Dukgeun, who researches internatio­nal trade law at Seoul National University. “That is not true.”

South Korea is the thirdlarge­st steel exporter to the U.S., after Canada and Brazil. Along with Mexico, they make up about half of the steel sent to the U.S. Canada is the largest exporter of both steel and aluminum to the U.S.

The tariffs — 25% on steel imports and 10% on aluminum — will take effect in two weeks.

Trump invoked national security as his justificat­ion, a tactic that infuriated allies. The European Union has threatened to hit back with tariffs on bourbon, blue jeans and Harley-Davidson motorcycle­s — items from regions with more political support for Trump or Republican lawmakers.

“If you put tariffs against your allies, one wonders who your enemies are,” European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said at a Thursday news conference.

Trump hinted that he might use tariff exemptions as a bargaining chip, particular­ly in talks with Mexico and Canada over the North American Free Trade Agreement. Neither of the two countries — the largest U.S. trading partners after China — took kindly to that notion.

The trade negotiatio­n “will follow its course independen­tly of this or any domestic policy measures,” Mexico’s Finance Ministry said in a statement. Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland also emphasized the move would not influence Canada’s decisions.

Trade officials in Brazil said the country would take “all necessary steps” to preserve its interests.

Trump’s announceme­nt came the same day that 11 nations, including Japan and Australia, signed a Pacific trade deal to replace the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. The president formally withdrew the U.S. from TPP last year, a move some viewed as the dawn of a protection­ist era in U.S. politics.

Timing is especially significan­t for South Korea. The shocking Thursday evening announceme­nt that Trump would meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un could give Seoul more leverage — or put one of the most significan­t breakthrou­ghs with the rogue state in jeopardy.

South Korean officials played an instrument­al role in organizing the meeting, and the U.S. will need the country’s help to make it successful. Government officials, at least until now, have sought to distance the two issues.

“Trade and security can’t be separated,” said Ahn, the South Korean trade expert. “The current government should try to link these two and increase its bargaining power.”

China also could stand to benefit. The communist nation is North Korea’s only ally, and Beijing would make a logical spot for the meeting. China’s Foreign Ministry on Friday welcomed the talks.

Analysts doubt the White House will ultimately abandon efforts to confront China on trade, especially with the resignatio­n of Gary Cohn, Trump’s top economic advisor, and the growing clout of Peter Navarro, a prominent administra­tion critic of China.

“All the adults have left the White House, so there are a lot of uncertaint­ies,” said Li Wei, professor of economics at the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing. “It’s going to be very messy.”

The U.S. administra­tion in January issued tariffs on solar panels and washing machines in an effort to slash cheap imports from China and South Korea. China, in response, launched an anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigat­ion weeks later into its imports of U.S. sorghum.

The American Chamber of Commerce in China has warned that Chinese officials could respond against punitive U.S. actions by targeting swaths of the United States that resonate with Trump, particular­ly agricultur­al areas in the Midwest. Experts point to soybeans, one of the top U.S. exports to China, as a possible target for retaliatio­n. Leaders also could embrace tit-for-tat measures aimed at U.S. companies that make sizable profits from the Chinese market (think Boeing and Apple).

Trade wars “only hurt others and yourself,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters Thursday before Trump’s announceme­nt. But if the U.S. takes aim at China, he said, his country will make a “justified and necessary response.”

Trump’s move left many in China wondering what he hoped to achieve.

“A rabbit does not eat grass near his home,” said Xu Bin, a professor at China Europe Internatio­nal Business School in Shanghai, referencin­g a Chinese saying. “You do not attack your relatives, the people close to you. But Trump is doing the opposite.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA Steel Industries in Fontana, the largest steel mill in the West, imports semifinish­ed steel from Mexico, Brazil and Japan.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA Steel Industries in Fontana, the largest steel mill in the West, imports semifinish­ed steel from Mexico, Brazil and Japan.

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