The Columbus Dispatch

China urges US firms to lobby DC

- By Joe McDonald and Youkyung Lee

BEIJING — China tried to step up pressure on Washington in their growing tariff war Thursday by suggesting U. S. companies lobby American leaders, while a Korean union warned President Donald Trump's threat of higher auto import duties could lead to job losses in Alabama.

Beijing and Washington have yet to resume negotiatio­ns over the dispute that led to tariff hikes on each other's goods last week, said a spokesman for the Chinese Commerce Ministry.

"We hope American companies do more to lobby the U. S. government and work hard to safeguard their own interests," said Gao Feng at a news conference.

While some U. S. companies and lawmakers have criticized Trump's tactics, Gao's statement was an unusually direct attempt to rouse domestic American opposition. Beijing frequently rejects foreign comments about its own policies as improper interferen­ce in its affairs.

The Trump administra­tion imposed a 25 percent tariff on $ 34 billion of Chinese goods Friday in response to complaints Beijing steals or pressures companies to hand over technology. Beijing responded by imposing similar duties on the same amount of imports from the United States.

Washington announced a second possible round of tariff hikes Tuesday targeting a wider range of $ 200 billion of goods. Beijing vowed "firm and forceful measures" in response, but China's lopsided trade balance means it cannot match the full scale of American tariff hikes. That has prompted concern regulators might expand retaliatio­n to trying to hamper operations of American companies in China.

At the heart of the dispute are Chinese policies including "Made in China 2025," a sweeping strategy that calls for state- led developmen­t of local champions in robots, biotech and other fields.

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