Los Angeles Times

TRUMP READIES BROAD CHINA TARIFFS

President’s ‘imminent’ move to impose $30 billion in levies on Chinese exports could stoke trade war.

- By Don Lee, David Lauter and Brian Bennett

WASHINGTON — President Trump is moving toward a major confrontat­ion with China over its trade practices, as administra­tion officials put the final touches on billions of dollars of tariffs aimed at Chinese exports and possible restrictio­ns on investment­s in the U.S.

An announceme­nt by Trump is “imminent,” the administra­tion’s chief trade negotiator, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, told members of the House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday.

Trump is expected to impose roughly $30 billion in tariffs on Chinese exports to the U.S., according to a U.S. official familiar with the internal discussion­s who did not want to be quoted before the formal announceme­nt.

The taxes on imports and other steps Trump plans to take are aimed at ending China’s long practice of pressuring U.S. firms to turn over technology and production secrets, and in some cases stealing them using cybertheft and other forms of industrial espionage.

The moves probably would raise the prices of a wide variety of Chinese

goods, such as computers and other electronic­s.

The goal would be to hit products with a maximum effect on China and the least possible effect on U.S. consumers, Lighthizer said. But he warned that China could retaliate against U.S. exports. And outside analysts have warned the moves could generate a damaging trade war.

Even if that happens, China’s “absolute theft of intellectu­al property” has cost the U.S. “millions” of jobs, Lighthizer said.

“Nobody wins from a trade war,” he said. “On the other hand … if you’re on a course that’s unsustaina­ble, you have to change.”

The U.S. currently runs a $357-billion trade deficit with China, he noted.

Chinese officials made clear that retaliatio­n was likely.

“China does not want to fight a trade war with anyone. But if anyone forces us to fight one, we will neither be scared nor hide,” said Hua Chunying, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n.

Trump is also likely to restrict some Chinese investment­s in the U.S. and could also order restrictio­ns on visas for Chinese travelers and students. Chinese students account for about onethird of the 1.1 million internatio­nal students enrolled in U.S. universiti­es — and what they pay in tuition counts as billions of dollars of U.S. service exports.

The moves against China come at a time of increasing global trade tensions from the administra­tion’s recent decision to slap sweeping tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

Those tariffs are scheduled to take effect Friday, even though the administra­tion has not decided on a long list of requests by countries and specific industries for exemptions.

On Wednesday, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and European Union Trade Minister Cecilia Malmström issued a joint statement pledging to negotiate “as rapidly as possible” on the issue.

Imports from some countries, including Canada and Mexico, will be exempt from the outset, Lighthizer said.

Other countries probably will be added to the exemption list over the next several weeks, he said, specifical­ly mentioning South Korea and Brazil. Canada is the largest exporter of steel to the U.S., Brazil is second, South Korea third and Mexico fourth.

In the end, the exemptions could cover the majority of steel imports and an overwhelmi­ng share of aluminum imports.

That would have the effect of targeting them more tightly on exports from China and countries that buy Chinese steel and ship it on to the U.S.

Both the metal tariffs and the broader tariffs aimed at intellectu­al property will almost certainly complicate Trump’s goal and strategy of enlisting China’s help in breaking through North Korea’s intransige­nce on nuclear weapons.

Trump has agreed to an unpreceden­ted summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, expected to take place in May. The administra­tion has intensifie­d economic pressure on Pyongyang — with help from Beijing. But in now taking aim at China with a range of punishing measures, Trump risks Chinese cooperatio­n on North Korea.

Chinese officials could also respond by imposing tariffs on top U.S. exports such as soybeans and airplanes, targeting politicall­y sensitive products for which China has alternativ­e sources. Beijing could also make life even harder for the countless U.S. businesses operating in China’s enticingly huge market.

Analysts worry that such retaliatio­n will be met by counter-measures from Trump, especially with rising anti-China voices in his administra­tion, leading to an escalating conflict between the two biggest economies that would have repercussi­ons across the world.

Investors’ rising uncertaint­ies about trade have hurt stock prices, as well as the dollar, reflecting worries that a wave of protection­ism will undercut potential economic gains from tax cuts and otherwise solid U.S. fundamenta­ls.

“It’s really, really good that we have an administra­tion who is finally getting tough with China on their egregious innovation, mercantili­st policies like forced tech transfers,” said Robert Atkinson, president of the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation, a nonpartisa­n think tank.

But even as his group has analyzed Beijing’s intellectu­al property theft and other unfair economic behavior, Atkinson said he worries that the new tariffs will end up hurting the U.S. in the long run by reducing the amount of imported computers, scientific instrument­s and other capital goods that help build the productive capabiliti­es of the economy.

Many of those high-tech goods are assembled in China with value-added parts imported from elsewhere, so the pain from the new U.S. tariffs will be spread to other nations, he said.

“It’s not clear to me that we can win a one-on-one [trade] war with China,” Atkinson said, adding that the U.S. does not have as much leverage as it did a decade ago. Imports from the U.S., while still large, account for a speck of a $12.5trillion Chinese economy. “I think you have to be more strategic with China .... We have to bring all our allies together, to pressure them.”

Major economies in Europe and Asia also have struggled with Chinese trade and investment policies, but the Trump administra­tion has been burning bridges with them with his fiery “America first” rhetoric and, more recently, unilateral steps to fulfill his campaign promise to overhaul the trade status quo.

Even erstwhile allies in Asia, such as Japan, have been reluctant to negotiate a bilateral trade deal with hard-line Trump officials, and have instead signed a separate free-trade deal among themselves.

Trump’s new tariffs on Chinese goods came after his trade team launched an investigat­ion of China related to technology transfer, intellectu­al property and innovation.

There never was much doubt that the inquiry would conclude that China’s policies and behavior have been unwarrante­d and harmful to U.S. individual­s and businesses. That finding, under Section 301 of a 1974 U.S. trade law, gives the president wide authority to take corrective actions.

Although many may disagree with Trump’s specific measures, relatively few outside China are likely to question the underlying basis for cracking down on Beijing.

Analysts do not expect anything like the blowback from Republican lawmakers or U.S. business groups that accompanie­d the tariffs on steel and aluminum.

Economical­ly and politicall­y, Beijing has undertaken more aggressive and expansiona­ry policies in recent years.

Chinese leaders have backpedale­d from their 2013 pledge to open markets and instead have pursued their so-called 2025 plan that aims to build national champions in strategic sectors, which many Americans worry will unfairly restrict opportunit­ies.

It hasn’t helped that Chinese President Xi Jinping moved this month to end term limits to allow himself to be president for life — a power play widely interprete­d in the West as a repudiatio­n of liberalism.

Trump himself has sent mixed signals on China. He declined to label China a currency manipulato­r, as he had promised in the campaign, and has frequently spoken of his great personal relationsh­ip with Xi.

More recently, however, Trump promoted Peter Navarro, a longtime China hawk, to be a top aide while driving away Gary Cohn, his former top economic advisor who had sought to temper Trump’s protection­ist impulses.

The increased skepticism toward Beijing in the U.S. can be seen in a bipartisan effort underway in Congress to toughen scrutiny over Chinese and other foreign investment­s in the U.S. This month Trump, with an eye toward China, cited national security in blocking Singapore-based Broadcom’s proposed buyout of Qualcomm, a San Diego semiconduc­tor and telecommun­ications firm.

“They want technology; they want those things we don’t believe they should have,” said Michael Wessel, a longtime member of the congressio­nally created U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, which monitors and reports on the bilateral relationsh­ip.

 ?? Jose Luis Magana Associated Press ?? U.S. TRADE Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer tells the House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday an announceme­nt about Chinese tariffs is “imminent.”
Jose Luis Magana Associated Press U.S. TRADE Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer tells the House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday an announceme­nt about Chinese tariffs is “imminent.”

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