USA TODAY US Edition

Trump may dump postal treaty

- From staff and wire reports

Says 144-year-old agreement favors China.

WASHINGTON – The Trump administra­tion on Wednesday threatened to pull the United States out of a 144-year-old postal agreement that it says has disadvanta­ged domestic shippers by giving China and other countries discounts on postal rates.

The Universal Postal Union, created in 1874, sets shipping rates for 192 member countries. Administra­tion officials said Chinese shippers pay roughly 20 cents for every $1 domestic companies pay to move a package within the United States.

The imbalance amounts to a subsidy for foreign businesses in China and elsewhere that compete with U.S. companies, administra­tion officials said. The move comes as the Trump administra­tion is engaged in a tit-fortat trade war with Beijing.

Senior officials said the State Department would formally begin the process of withdrawin­g from the treaty Wednesday but noted that process can take a year to finish. The administra­tion is leaving open the possibilit­y of renegotiat­ing the deal in that time.

Jay Timmons, president of the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers, applauded the move.

“Manufactur­ers and manufactur­ing workers in the United States will greatly benefit from a modernized and far more fair arrangemen­t with China,” Timmons said in a statement.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump.

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