San Antonio Express-News

China trimming tariffs on loads of products

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BEIJING — China said Monday that it will reduce tariffs Jan. 1 on more than 850 foreign products including frozen pork, asthma medication­s and some high-tech components to spur economic developmen­t.

The announceme­nt followed an interim trade agreement with Washington in a tariff war that has rattled financial markets.

The step adds to a series of tariff cuts over the past two years that Beijing says are aimed at improving supplies of consumer goods and encouragin­g competitio­n. Chinese officials say they should not be seen as concession­s to U.S. pressure.

The step is intended to “promote the coordinate­d developmen­t of trade and environmen­t,“the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Xinhua and other state media said the temporary import tariffs would be reduced to levels lower than most-favored-nation rates.

Beijing has adopted a string of market-opening measures and tariff cuts meant to help revive economic growth that slowed to a three-decade low of 6 percent in the latest quarter.

The Finance Ministry said the new tariff cuts would mainly apply to products in short supply and to foreign products for daily use.

They ranged from turbine valves and other industrial components to orange juice and other commoditie­s. Many tariffs of 5 percent to 10 percent were eliminated while higher duties of up to 65 percent were cut by half or more.

The duty on frozen pork was cut from 12 percent to 8 percent. That would help food companies that have boosted pork imports to replenish supplies as China contends with an epidemic of African swine fever that has devastated its pig herds.

Reducing tariffs on some types of semiconduc­tors would help high-tech industries that the ruling Communist Party wants to become world leaders.

Also Monday, the government promised to open its oil, telecom and power markets wider to private competitor­s as the Communist Party tries to shore up growth in the slowing statedomin­ated economy.

The Cabinet said it would give private companies equal treatment with stateowned enterprise­s in more industries. The announceme­nt gave no details of ownership limits or other possible restrictio­ns on private companies or whether foreign investors would be allowed. It said a timetable was being developed.

The statement promised to “introduce market competitio­n” in key industries including power, telecoms, railways, oil and natural gas. It said private enterprise­s would be allowed for the first time to carry out basic telecom services and invest in power generation and distributi­on.

Beijing has ended restrictio­ns on full foreign ownership in electric car manufactur­ing and says that will extend to the whole auto industry by 2021. Regulators also have promised to allow full foreign ownership in banking, insurance and other finance businesses.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Images of President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping appear on a computer screen in Seoul, South Korea. Chinese tariff cuts begin Jan. 1.
Associated Press file photo Images of President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping appear on a computer screen in Seoul, South Korea. Chinese tariff cuts begin Jan. 1.

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